The Use of #Migrant and #Refugee on Twitter
Clare Llewellyn and Laura Cram
In discussions on the mass movement of people from the Mediterranean Basin to Europe, the choice of words can play an important role. Clare Llewellyn and Laura Cram explore how users on Twitter make use of the terms ‘migrant’ and ‘refugee’ in the debate.
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The movement of people across borders and the implications of that movement are at the heart of current debates in the European Union. This issue is likely to play a central role in the forthcoming UK referendum on continued membership of the EU.
What Would UK Immigration Policy Look Like After Brexit?
Sep 14, 2015 … Last month’s immigration statistics showed net migration to the UK rising to … painlessly, what would our new immigration policy look like?
UKANDEU.AC.UK
How the debate is framed in public discussions may have important implications for the outcome of the referendum.
Record concern over migration underscores how climate favourable for #Brexit. But can Outers overcome infighting?
http://t.co/1G2CakdiGk— Matthew Goodwin (@GoodwinMJ) September 30, 2015
There has been discussion both online and in the media about the use of the terms ‘migrant’ and ‘refugee’ and the difference between the terms.
Migrant v Refugee: What’s the Difference?
Not all migrants then are refugees, but refugees can fall under the migrant umbrella. One of the major differences between the two designations is that while migrants may seek to escape harsh conditions of their own, refugees could face imprisonment …
CNN
With the BBC using both in one headline:
Migrant Crisis: UK Public ‘Split’ over Taking Refugees
Some 57% of people in the UK are in favour of the status quo, or the government taking fewer refugees from Syria and Libya, a poll suggests. Forty per cent said the UK should take in more. One thousand people were interviewed by telephone between Friday and Sunday in a ComRes poll for BBC Newsnight.
BBC News
There was even a petition asking the BBC to use the term ‘refugee’:
Petition · Request BBC use the correct term Refugee Crisis instead …
We kindly request that the BBC use the term Refugee Crisis instead of Migrant … One word can make all the difference. … Zinon Zygkostiotis started this petition …
WWW.CHANGE.ORG
We looked to our dataset to see if there was a difference in how these terms are used on Twitter. The data was collected between 7 August 2015 and 11 September 2015 (it is ongoing but these snapshots are taken from then). Initially we looked at the frequency of the two terms:
Frequency of the use of #refugee in our twitter dataset (Aug-Sept) pic.twitter.com/6ae7OlN6YL
— myimageoftheEU (@myimageoftheEU) September 11, 2015
Frequency of migrant pic.twitter.com/h0JEpwfxiv
— myimageoftheEU (@myimageoftheEU) September 11, 2015
We can see that the term ‘migrant’ is used much less frequently than ‘refugee’ – 2549 times as opposed to 7637, respectively. We also see that the use of both terms has increased dramatically after 20 August 2015. The trend continues up towards a peak around 3 September 2015, when the body of a young refugee was found on a beach in Greece.
We also looked at which hashtags are used in association, and used in the same tweet, with migrant and refugee. We also included any compound terms including refugee such as refugeesWelcome (the biggest tag in our set by far) or refugeecrisis. Considering that we built the set using the search terms ‘EU’ and ‘Europe’, it is no surprise to see them in the set. However, since they are used in the same tweets as ‘crisis’ and ‘migrant’, the Twittersphere obviously sees this as an EU-related issue. There are some specific locations mentioned in association with ‘refugee’ – namely, Syria, Kos, Munich, Germany and Hungary.
Use of #migrant during August and September pic.twitter.com/iIAOz5LtHK
— myimageoftheEU (@myimageoftheEU) September 11, 2015
When people use the term ‘migrant’, they also often mention ‘asylum’ and ‘ISIS’. These terms don’t appear with ‘refugee’.
Use of #refugee during August and September pic.twitter.com/Zukw1JEaqY
— myimageoftheEU (@myimageoftheEU) September 11, 2015
Our project is part of the Economic and Social Research Council’s The UK in a Changing Europe programme. Look out for our regular updates as the project tracks developments in the debate on the UK’s continued membership of the EU and follow us on Twitter @myimageoftheEU.
Neuropolitics Research Lab – People – Politics and International Relations (PIR)
Neuropolitics research politics experiments using fMRI brain scanning.
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Laura Cram is Senior Fellow, The UK in a Changing Europe, investigating The European Union in the Public Imagination: Maximising the Impact of Transdisciplinary Insights (ESRC/ES/N003985/1).
This article was originally published on the imagineEurope Storify.
Clare Llewellyn
University of Edinburgh
Clare Llewellyn is PhD Candidate in Informatics and Research Fellow in the Neuropolitics Research Lab at the University of Edinburgh. Her research focuses on user-generated content on the Internet. Her research interests include social media, big data and text and data analytics.
Laura Cram
University of Edinburgh
Prof Laura Cram is Professor of European Politics at the University of Edinburgh; Senior Fellow, The UK in a Changing Europe; and Academic Editor of European Futures. Her research areas include European public policy, European identity and the neuropolitics of public policy and identity.
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