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Refugee flows and terrorism in the European Union: securitization through association

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Abstract

This article contributes to the debates on the securitization of asylum and migration in Europe by focussing on the securitization of asylum-seekers through their association with terrorism during the ‘refugee crisis’, which coincided with a ‘terrorism crisis’, in 2015–2016. Theoretically, it argues that, whilst the intrinsic characteristics of some issues mean that they are unlikely to be directly securitized, they may be indirectly securitized through their association with another issue that has come to be widely accepted as a security threat, such as terrorism or a pandemic. Empirically, the article shows how asylum-seekers, who had not been securitized in Europe in the aftermath of 9/11, became socially constructed as a security threat indirectly through their association with terrorism in 2015–2016. This association mainly took place through the deployment of specific practices. Recent events suggest that the securitization of asylum-seekers in the EU has had enduring effects.

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Notes

  1. It is important to acknowledge that some observers may have seen these characteristics as indicating that asylum-seekers could actually be more prone to radicalisation, thereby becoming security threats, especially to their host country.

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Léonard, S., Kaunert, C. Refugee flows and terrorism in the European Union: securitization through association. Int Polit 59, 562–576 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1057/s41311-021-00359-4

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