Poynter Online
Go


Top Story

Bill Keller Explains NYT's Handling of Rangel Letter, Reporter Response
Most Recent Articles
Most E-mailed
Recent Comments
Recent Tags
Community Activity

Poynter Training
Poynter Seminars
Small, in-person training experiences.
News University
Today's most popular courses on NewsU, Poynter's e-learning site for journalists.
Webinars
Our online classroom is just a click away. Learn more.
All Webinars

Diversity at Work

Home > Ethics & Diversity > Diversity at Work
Tools: Text Sizeor, Print, RSSRSS, Subscribe via e-mail
Aly Colón
New, fresh and alternative ways to encourage and enhance journalistic storytelling from different perspectives.
--"Black Brokers on Obama," National Public Radio
-- "Civil Rights' Leaders Wish List of Issues for New President," the Black Press of America
-- "Not Black President Obama, Just President Obama," New America Media

FEATURED COLUMNS/BLOGS
-- Poynter en Espanol -- Poynter Online's Spanish language page
-- Richard Prince's "Journal-isms," The Maynard Institute
-- Racialicious -- Blog about the intersection of race and pop culture
-- Immigration Chronicles -- The Houston Chronicle's Immigration blog
-- Color Lines, Magazine on race and politics
-- New America Media: Expanding the News Lens Through Ethnic Media, Aggregated content from more than 700 ethnic media partners

DEL.ICIO.US PAGE FOR DIVERSITY AT WORK

DIVERSITY TIP SHEETS/RESOURCES

DIVERSITY BIBLIOGRAPHY

FEEDBACK GUIDELINES


Playing the 'Name Game'
By Aly Colón

RELATED
"People Without Paperwork," by Mary Sanchez

"Life Behind the Label," by Aly Colón

"Black, black, or African American," by Aly Colón

"Accent on Accuracy," by Aly Colón
How we identify people who enter the United States without following proper immigration procedures has become almost as complicated as the immigration issue itself.

A variety of descriptions appear in print, online and on the air. Here are just a few:
  • "Illegal immigrant"
  • "Illegal alien"
  • "Undocumented immigrant"
  • "Illegals"
Ted Vaden, a staff writer for The News & Observer in Raleigh, N.C., tackles this issue in a thoughtful column. He pegs his piece to his paper's recent coverage of "students without documentation" and the question of whether they should be entering the community colleges and universities of North Carolina. 

Vaden identifies the terms, looks at his paper's style guide, interviews others facing similar labeling challenges and quotes the N&O's front page editor's defense of the term "illegal immigrant." He writes:

Steve Merelman, The N&O's front-page editor who oversees word usage, defends the current illegal immigrant standard. The phrase describes reality under current law, he said, and if people have a problem, they need to change the law.

"I don't see much point in perfuming what some people think stinks," he said. "We can call them 'undocumented' or we can call them 'unauthorized,' but it still doesn't stop them from being deported. It seems cold, but that's our job -- to take a cold-eyed look at things."

Vaden then offers his own view, which would "loosen the style manual to allow undocumented and unauthorized."

I can understand Merelman's view, and I appreciate Vaden's flexibility.

As a journalist who has written about and edited many stories involving diverse issues and people from different backgrounds, my inclination is to avoid labels as much as possible. Try to describe as accurately as you can the people you are covering. The more specific, the better. What we, as journalists, think we save by using a label and fewer words, we more than make up for in confusion, bias, prejudice and distortion. Labels limit us. And they limit the reality we see.
Posted by Aly Colón 2:05 PM
Tools:
Comment, e-mail, Permalink, Share
Recent Comments:
"Undocumented" is false Since illegals customarily use forged or fake documents to work... More.
Read All Comments (3 comments)
Username
Password
New User? Signup Now
Poynter Careers
More media jobs