Editorial: Connecting (forced) migration and Media Studies. By M. TWIGHT & D. MANGALOUSII

FacebookTwitterE-mailPrint

Editorial: Connecting (forced) migration and Media Studies. By M. TWIGHT & D. MANGALOUSII

Keywords

Cite as: Twight, M., & D. Mangalousi, 2018, 'Editorial: Connecting (forced) migration and Media Studies', for(e)dialogue, 2 (1): 1- 11. DOI:https://doi.org/10.29311/for(e)dialogue.v2i1.2803.

Abstract

This Special Issue on (Forced) Migration and Media is the result of two workshops organised at the University of Leicester: a workshop on (Forced) Migration and Media-research that took place on the 13th of June 2016 and a Community Impact event that was organised on the 18th of July, 2016. These workshops were a response to the topical interest for refugees’ access to digital technology and the dehumanizing language used in, especially but not limited to British, media regarding migrants and/or refugees (Berry, Garcia-Blanco, & Moore, 2015). (Forced) was purposefully bracketed as the label ‘refugee’ has its own difficulties. The differentiation between economic and forced migrants for instance negates that reasons behind migration are often multi-causal and multi-layered. It reinforces thinking in dichotomies that homogenizes and tends to negate in-between complexities, as  is often appropriated as a governing tool to victimize, exclude and curtail the rights of human beings (Crawley & Skleparis, 2017; Lindley, 2010; Zetter, 2007). In this editorial, we reflect upon the main outcomes of the workshop we and other PhD-colleagues organised on the 13th of June, 2016, and connect them to the articles within this Special Issue.

Read more here>>>