Security Perceptions in Liminal Spaces: Opportunities and Challenges in the EU, Middle East and Russia, İzmir, Türkiye, 12 - 13 Mayıs 2022, ss.107-126
Public anxiety in Western Europe about immigrants and refugees has
increased due to the 2007-2008 financial and economic crisis, the
2009-2010 Euro crisis and the 2015 refugee
crisis in Europe as well as the terror attacks in Brussels, Berlin, Paris,
London, Nice, and Manchester. Having
been more of a societal and economic issue from the 1960s to 1990s, immigration
has become a security issue in the last couple of decades. According to the
Copenhagen School of security studies, securitizing speech acts are
particularly important for turning a non-security matter like immigration into
a security issue. Thus, immigration was transformed into an “economic security”
issue threatening the well-being of Europeans due to their allegations of
immigrants taking away their jobs. It also became a “cultural security” issue
as a supposed threat to European identity, religion, and life style. Most
importantly, immigration was seen as a “state security” issue due to the
perception that it was a threat to European countries’ peace, and stability,
and territorial integrity.
Framing immigration as a security issue is mainly observed through
the discourses of the political elite. Of these elites, Western Europe’s
populist radical right parties have concentrated on this issue more than the
others. Indeed, their central discourse has securitized the immigration issue,
which they have used for their political benefit by continuously highlighting societal and cultural insecurity. These parties have played a significant role in
promoting rhetoric and policies that increase public anxieties concerning
immigrants. To gain the votes of the economically and culturally
suffering groups, the parties’ leaders have securitized immigration through
speeches, social media posts, and political advertising. As a sign of their
effectiveness prior to the outbreak of COVID-19, a number of parties became
junior partners in European coalition governments during the late 2010s. The purpose of this paper is to examine the securitization discourses of radical populist right parties in Western Europe concerning the recent flow of refugees mainly coming from Syria. To that the paper will concentrate on the discourses of the leaders of populist radical right parties in Germany, Austria, France, Italy, Germany and the Netherlands.