1. Selling displaced people? A multi-method study of the public communication strategies of international refugee organisations
- Author
-
Stijn Joye and David Ongenaert
- Subjects
Persuasion ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Refugee ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Poison control ,02 engineering and technology ,Public administration ,01 natural sciences ,Critical discourse analysis ,Politics ,State (polity) ,Political science ,Humans ,Mass Media ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Refugees ,Syria ,Displaced person ,Communication ,General Social Sciences ,International Agencies ,Forced migration ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences - Abstract
The world has seen a major increase in forced displacement since 2011. As a growing number of states implement restrictive refugee policies, public communication has become essential for refugee organisations. This study analysed, therefore, three international refugee organisations' discursive strategies towards the recent Syrian crisis, as well as their production and the social context. A critical discourse analysis of international press releases (N=122) and six semi-structured interviews with press and regional officers revealed that the observed actors largely dehumanise displaced people and subordinate them to the 'Western self' and state interests; displaced people hardly ever acquire their own voice. The study found that the medium characteristics of press releases and the importance of media attention result in a depersonalising humanitarian discourse. In addition, there were indications of a post-humanitarian discourse that reproduced the humanitarian sector's 'marketisation'. Finally, the examined organisations use the political realist cross-issue persuasion strategy, displaying displaced people as resettlement objects.
- Published
- 2019