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Constructing immigrants in UK legislation and Administration informative texts: A corpus-driven study (2007–2011)

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


Type

Article

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Authors

Pérez-Paredes, P 
Jiménez, PA 
Hernández, PS 

Abstract

jats:pResearch has shown that immigrants tend to be negatively constructed in the discourse of the media. In the context of the European Union (EU), British newspapers reportedly offer largely negative or partial constructions of these individuals. These representations contribute to jeopardizing the integration of this group of people, as their social construction reflects and influences the attitudes of EU citizens and the immigration policies. Our research examines the collocational profile of the lemma ‘migrant’ in the UK legislation and UK Administration informative texts from 2007 to 2011. While our results show that the UK Administration avoids an explicit negative construction of immigrants coming to the United Kingdom, we have found that they are partially constructed as a homogeneous, well-categorized group through an extremely limited set of lexical items that tend to prime their adscription to tiers. We argue that the representation of immigrants in the legislation points to the fact that UK laws and official information during the period 2007–2011 were more focused on legitimating the control over this group of individuals than on creating the conditions for better integration policies.</jats:p>

Description

Keywords

Collocation analysis, construction, corpus linguistics, critical discourse analysis, discourse analysis, immigrants, migrants, representation

Journal Title

Discourse and Society

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0957-9265
1460-3624

Volume Title

Publisher

SAGE Publications
Sponsorship
Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (Grant FFI2011-30214: Lenguaje de la Administración Pública en el ámbito de la extranjería: estudio multilingüe e implicaciones culturales)