StoryLab
Designed to Power Narrative Change
Define American’s StoryLab is a resource to equip storytellers and advocates with accessible tools to strengthen storytelling about immigration, and to develop narrative change strategies.
The Define American StoryLab offers a unique framework to seamlessly turn research into actionable narrative change practices, driving impactful stories for immigrant inclusion and justice.
What We’re Up Against
Immigration is at the center of American partisan politics, with digital platforms fueling a media narrative that often dehumanizes and misrepresents immigrant communities. This harmful language has spread and grown across mainstream media at an unprecedented scale.
Since 2020, Define American has been studying how anti-immigrant actors create and spread false and dangerous narratives across digital spaces. The below data visualization represents an ecosystem of anti-immigrant YouTube content that Define American studied in 2022.
Click and pull any of the dots to see how it is connected to other YouTube channels that also spread anti-immigrant content.
Who is the Moveable Middle?
Despite anti-immigrant media portrayals, a large portion of Americans across racial and ethnic backgrounds fall between party lines on immigration and are moveable on this issue. This audience is at the heart of our work. We call them the “Moveable Middle.”
To understand the Moveable Middle audience, we worked with our research partner Harmony Labs to analyze the Moveable Middle’s media consumption data over the course of a year, including news, TV, film, and social media.
Harmony Labs identified four key audience segments within the Moveable Middle who are open to pro-immigrant perspectives and are moveable in attitudes and beliefs on immigration.
Harmony Labs works from a globally evidence-based and cross-cultural model of basic human values developed by the theorist Shalom Schwartz. The model shows us that we, as humans, fall on a spectrum of how much we care about the “we” of community vs caring about “me” as the individual and how much we care about protecting and preserving our current way of life vs. striving and creating something new.