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Immigration, Race, and Nation in the UK: The Politics of Belonging on Twitter

Authors :
Bindi Shah
Jessica Ogden
Source :
Shah, B & Ogden, J 2021, ' Immigration, Race, and Nation in the UK : The Politics of Belonging on Twitter ', Sociological Research Online . https://doi.org/10.1177/13607804211029968
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2021.

Abstract

At a time of rising right-wing populism, the heightened political salience of immigration as an issue is linked to conceptions of ‘the national’. In this article, we analyse tweets from non-elites, defined as isolated users with low network influence, engaged in a ‘conversation’ about migration on Twitter. We investigate the values embedded in these attitudes, and what these tell us about constructions and contestations of the symbolic boundaries of the nation among ordinary people. Our corpus includes tweets posted in temporal proximity to the lifting of transitional controls on Romanian and Bulgarian migrants in the UK (1 October 2013 to 1 March 2014). Thematic analysis reveals a cohesive set of anti-immigrant or anti-immigration sentiments linked to UKIP and that express an exclusionary nationalism based on assumptions about race, ‘whiteness’ and entitlement. Also evident is a counter-narrative of pro-immigration sentiments that draw on multiple and sometimes contradictory values. Some of these values contest racialised understandings of the nation but do not coalesce in ways to disrupt the dominance of right-wing anti-immigrant sentiments on Twitter. Our findings demonstrate the importance of investigating values embedded in both anti and pro-immigration attitudes among non-elites and what these values indicate about the possibilities of re-framing migration debates among non-elites in ways that construct more inclusive symbolic national boundaries. In addition, in using the networked properties of Twitter engagement to identify non-elite users, we make a methodological contribution to scholarship on immigration attitudes.

Details

ISSN :
13607804
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Sociological Research Online
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d2e5016c262d419398224bd50b6e7b51