Media and Securitisation: The Influence on Perception
The relationship between media and perception is essential to securitisation processes. Through the adoption of specific wordings and narratives the media can and do influence the public perception of a given phenomenon as a challenge or even an existential threat to public security, economic prosperity, social stability or cultural homogeneity. Media narratives are exploited by political actors, which promote and/or instrumentalise securitised issues in order to present themselves as the only actors able to provide a solution. During the years of the “migration crisis”, many media outlets in Europe created a perception of the magnitude of migration phenomenon that had little basis in empirical data while also portraying it as inherently threatening. The securitisation to which migration was subjected led to a much worsened perception of migrants by the public and consequently to a greater political appeal of parties that made anti-immigration the core of their public discourse.
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Details
Rome, IAI, July 2021, 16 p. -
In:
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Issue
21|34 -
ISBN/ISSN/DOI:
978-88-9368-211-4
Introduction
1. The securitarian perspective
2. Media influence and public opinion
3. Merging theory with reality: The migration crisis
Conclusions
References
Appendix A