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Shaping Of The Public Discourse On Refugees In Social Media: "Refugees Welcome Lithuania"

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  • Sutkutė, Rūta

    (Vytautas Magnus University)

Abstract

Social media websites, such as Facebook and Twitter, are starting to become places, where people present and evaluate various events in the world: terrorist attacks in London, Barcelona, Berlin, Brussels. What is more, these websites influence values of their users and readers. Technologies allow people to exchange views at the very moment of the event. The time zone, area, or other physical aspects of the platform participants do not matter. However, this ability might cause negative impact on the discussed social groups. The aim of this article – to analyse the discourse formation in media regarding refugees’ integration and humanitarian crisis in Europe. The goals of this study are: to figure out how the practices of public participation evidences in the context of communication through social media; to form a methodology according to up-to-date communicational concepts and analyse how the images of refugees are formed in social media; to reveal the main actors, involved in the formation of the discourse on refugees in Lithuania, by analysing the content in Facebook pages “Priimsiu pabėgėlį” (eng. “Refugees Welcome”) and “Visuomeninis komitetas prieš priverstinę imigraciją” (eng. “Public Committee against Forced Immigration”).

Suggested Citation

  • Sutkutė, Rūta, 2019. "Shaping Of The Public Discourse On Refugees In Social Media: "Refugees Welcome Lithuania"," EUREKA: Social and Humanities, Scientific Route OÜ, issue 1, pages 35-52.
  • Handle: RePEc:nos:social:y:2019:i:1:p:35-52
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. David Courpasson, 2016. "Looking Away? Civilized Indifference and the Carnal Relationships of the Contemporary Workplace," Post-Print hal-02313362, HAL.
    2. Iris Korthagen & Ingmar Van Meerkerk, 2014. "The Effects of Media and their Logic on Legitimacy Sources within Local Governance Networks: A Three-Case Comparative Study," Local Government Studies, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 40(5), pages 705-728, September.
    3. Heather Johnson, 2011. "Click to Donate: visual images, constructing victims and imagining the female refugee," Third World Quarterly, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 32(6), pages 1015-1037.
    4. David Courpasson, 2016. "Looking Away? Civilized Indifference and the Carnal Relationships of the Contemporary Workplace," Journal of Management Studies, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 53(6), pages 1094-1100, September.
    5. Benček, David & Strasheim, Julia, 2016. "Refugees welcome? Introducing a new dataset on anti-refugee violence in Germany, 2014-2015," Kiel Working Papers 2032, Kiel Institute for the World Economy (IfW Kiel).
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    Cited by:

    1. Rivka Saltiel, 2020. "Urban Arrival Infrastructures between Political and Humanitarian Support: The ‘Refugee Welcome’ Mo(ve)ment Revisited," Urban Planning, Cogitatio Press, vol. 5(3), pages 67-77.

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