Rhetoric, power, and the legitimization of asylum policies. A critical discourse analysis of swiss parliamentary speech across three refugee movements
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
This thesis critically explores Swiss parliamentary discourse on refugees during three key
moments: the Balkan refugee movements of the 1990s, the 2015 refugee movements, and the
Ukrainian refugee movement starting in 2022. The project employs qualitative content analysis
as a starting point. Using Critical Discourse Analysis, the study examines how political language
shapes perceptions of different refugee groups, legitimizes policy decisions through language,
and thereby reproduces power dynamics. The portrayal of the three refugee movements at stake
reveals contrasting results. During the Balkan wars, refugees were often described as victims.
Religion dominated the discourse in 2015, with Muslims often depicted as threats. In 2022,
Ukrainian refugees were framed in more neutral terms, suggesting a closer identification with the
Swiss “in-group”. This thesis also highlights the notion of conditional solidarity that Switzerland
uses, mirroring Switzerland’s past as a transmigration country. A critical finding is the Federal
Council’s contradictory legal reasoning for the permit S, which reveals how inequality is
reproduced and normalized through political discourse. While this thesis provides an in-depth
case study on Switzerland, it contributes to broader discussions on how political discourse
influences human rights compliance, social inclusion of refugees, and the justification of
exclusionary policies.
Description
Second semester University: Université du Luxembourg