EU:s (o)säkra identitet
(2012) STVK01 20112Department of Political Science
- Abstract
- While reading European newspapers one easily gets the impression of a growing feeling of insecurity in the society. The aim of my thesis is to examine whether the European migration policy has been securitized or not and subsequently if there is a wish from the European Council to securitize an European identity.
The method for answering my question is the Copenhagen school
securitization theory, combined with discourse analysis of relevant EU policy documents, the Tampere programme, the Hague programme and the Stockholm programme. Each programme is divided into three discourses; asylum- and migration, illegal migration and societal identity.
My conclusions are that a desecuritization can be seen in the discourse
concerning the asylum-... (More) - While reading European newspapers one easily gets the impression of a growing feeling of insecurity in the society. The aim of my thesis is to examine whether the European migration policy has been securitized or not and subsequently if there is a wish from the European Council to securitize an European identity.
The method for answering my question is the Copenhagen school
securitization theory, combined with discourse analysis of relevant EU policy documents, the Tampere programme, the Hague programme and the Stockholm programme. Each programme is divided into three discourses; asylum- and migration, illegal migration and societal identity.
My conclusions are that a desecuritization can be seen in the discourse
concerning the asylum- and migration policy, where a welcoming tone now can be discerned. I found the discourse regarding the illegal migration highly securitized and the European Council urging for repatriation, mainly voluntarily but if necessary by other means. The discourse concerning a European identity shows that there is a will from the European Council to distinguish “us” from “them”, revealed in the integration policy by allocating “us” with privileges “they” do not posses. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/2275588
- author
- Athanasiadi, Melina LU
- supervisor
-
- Ted Svensson LU
- organization
- alternative title
- Säkerhetiseringen av EU:s migrationspolitik som medel för utvecklandet av en europeisk identitet.
- course
- STVK01 20112
- year
- 2012
- type
- M2 - Bachelor Degree
- subject
- keywords
- EU, europeisk identitet, Säkerhetisering, illegala invandrare, asylsökande flyktingar, migranter.
- language
- Swedish
- id
- 2275588
- date added to LUP
- 2012-02-14 20:53:35
- date last changed
- 2012-02-14 20:53:35
@misc{2275588, abstract = {{While reading European newspapers one easily gets the impression of a growing feeling of insecurity in the society. The aim of my thesis is to examine whether the European migration policy has been securitized or not and subsequently if there is a wish from the European Council to securitize an European identity. The method for answering my question is the Copenhagen school securitization theory, combined with discourse analysis of relevant EU policy documents, the Tampere programme, the Hague programme and the Stockholm programme. Each programme is divided into three discourses; asylum- and migration, illegal migration and societal identity. My conclusions are that a desecuritization can be seen in the discourse concerning the asylum- and migration policy, where a welcoming tone now can be discerned. I found the discourse regarding the illegal migration highly securitized and the European Council urging for repatriation, mainly voluntarily but if necessary by other means. The discourse concerning a European identity shows that there is a will from the European Council to distinguish “us” from “them”, revealed in the integration policy by allocating “us” with privileges “they” do not posses.}}, author = {{Athanasiadi, Melina}}, language = {{swe}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{EU:s (o)säkra identitet}}, year = {{2012}}, }