Journal of Scientific Papers

ECONOMICS & SOCIOLOGY


© CSR, 2008-2019
ISSN 2071-789X

3.1
2019CiteScore
 
91th percentile
Powered by  Scopus



Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ)


Strike Plagiarism

Partners
  • General Founder and Publisher:

     
    Centre of Sociological Research

     

  • Publishing Partners:

    University of Szczecin (Poland)

    Széchenyi István University, (Hungary)

    Mykolas Romeris University (Lithuania)

    Alexander Dubcek University of Trencín (Slovak Republic)


  • Membership:


    American Sociological Association


    European Sociological Association


    World Economics Association (WEA)

     


    CrossRef

     


Visual frames of migrants and refugees in the main Western European media

Vol. 12, No 3, 2019

Javier J. Amores,

 

University of Salamanca,

Salamanca, Spain

E-mail: javieramores@usal.es

visual frames of migrants and refugees in the main Western European media

 

Carlos Arcila Calderón,

 

University of Salamanca,

Salamanca, Spain

E-mail: carcila@usal.es


Mikolaj Stanek,

 

University of Salamanca,

Salamanca, Spain

E-mail: mstanek@usal.es

 


 

Abstract. This work analyses the denotative and connotative visual framing of migrants and refugees in European media during the migration crisis in Europe in general and in the Mediterranean in particular. The main objective is to identify the differences between Germany, the country that receives the most asylum requests, and other Western Europe countries (Spain, France, Italy and the United Kingdom). The second goal is to detect temporal differences between the first period of the crisis (2013-2014) and the second period (2015-2017), when the conflict worsened. We content analysed a sample of 500 news photographs from 10 media outlets of five European countries. The results indicate that the most predominant visual frame represents migrants and refugees as victims. However, it was also observed that the frames depicting these individuals as a threat to Western societies are more frequent in German media, and also during the second period of the crisis.

 

Received: February, 2019

1st Revision: May, 2019

Accepted: September, 2019

 

DOI: 10.14254/2071-789X.2019/12-3/10

JEL ClassificationZ130

Keywords: framing, visual framing, migrants, refugees, European media, European press, news photographs, migration crisis