“We Are All Migrants”: ideological construction of Xenophobia in Nigerian and South African newspaper reports
Date
2025
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Routledge: Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
Fear and animosity towards asylum seekers and migrants have experienced a worldwide increase in recent decades, with
xenophobia being the recent particular experience in South Africa. This study analyses how discursive strategies in Nigerian and South African newspaper reports ideologically frame people, actions, and events, displaying a biased portrayal influenced by
prejudiced ideologies. Using Wodak’s discourse-historical approach to critical discourse analysis, the study examines 80
news articles from two Nigerian (Nigeria Tribune and Punch) and two South African (The Times and Daily Sun) newspapers,
published during the xenophobic violence of 2008 and 2015. Findings reveal a shared Pan-African ideology in both countries’ media; however, South African reports often exhibit extreme nationalist sentiments that justify attacks on foreigners, while Nigerian reports express retributive ideology, threatening retaliation and seeking legal accountability. Discursive strategies, including nomination, predication and argumentation, and substrategies of assimilation, unification, dissimilation and blame
shift reveal complex ideological interplays regarding African unity, national identity, and responses to xenophobic actions. Nigerian and South African news reports employ various discursive strategies, which reflect differing national approaches to migration and xenophobia, reflecting the ongoing struggle for social cohesion within African nations. This reveals the media’s role in shaping people’s attitudes in discriminatory discourses.
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Keywords
xenophobia, discursive strategies, migration, nationalism, African unity, newspaper reports
