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<title>DISCOURSE REPRESENTATION AND IDEOLOGY IN SELECTED NIGERIAN NEWSPAPER REPORTS ON MIGRATION,</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1914" rel="alternate"/>
<subtitle/>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1914</id>
<updated>2026-04-05T23:44:27Z</updated>
<dc:date>2026-04-05T23:44:27Z</dc:date>
<entry>
<title>DISCOURSE REPRESENTATION AND IDEOLOGY IN SELECTED NIGERIAN NEWSPAPER REPORTS ON MIGRATION,</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1915" rel="alternate"/>
<author>
<name>OLUWAYEMI, Taiwo Victor</name>
</author>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1915</id>
<updated>2024-04-24T08:52:19Z</updated>
<published>2023-07-01T00:00:00Z</published>
<summary type="text">DISCOURSE REPRESENTATION AND IDEOLOGY IN SELECTED NIGERIAN NEWSPAPER REPORTS ON MIGRATION,
OLUWAYEMI, Taiwo Victor
Discourse representations ascribed to social actors unveil ideological orientations in&#13;
newspaper reports on migration. Previous studies on migration have explored sociolinguistic,&#13;
media and literary issues, with little attention paid to how discourse is used to represent&#13;
social actors and convey ideologies in newspaper reportage of migration in Nigeria. This&#13;
study was, therefore, designed to examine discourse representations in selected Nigerian&#13;
newspaper reports on migration, in order to account for discourse issues, linguistic devices,&#13;
pragmatic acts, social actors’ representations and ideologies in the reportage.&#13;
Teun van Dijk’s socio-cognitive approach to Critical Discourse Analysis, complemented by&#13;
M. A. K. Halliday’s Transitivity System of Systemic Functional Grammar and Theo van&#13;
Leeuwen’s Representation of Social Actors, served as the framework. The interpretive&#13;
design was adopted. Six Nigerian newspapers, which extensively reported migration news,&#13;
were selected using quota sampling. Four were from the Lagos/Ibadan axis (Punch, The&#13;
Guardian (TG), The Nation (TN) and The Sun (TS)) and two from the Kaduna axis (Daily&#13;
Trust (DT) and Leadership). Purposive sampling was used to select 120 newspaper reports&#13;
published between 2015 and 2021 on migration―20 from each newspaper. The data were&#13;
subjected to critical discourse analysis.&#13;
Five discourse issues (DIs) were identified: security (DT, TN, TS, Leadership and Punch),&#13;
human trafficking (DT, TG, TN, TS and Punch), poverty (TG, TN, TS and Punch),&#13;
unemployment (DT, TN and Punch) and immigration (TN, Leadership and Punch). Five&#13;
linguistic devices characterised the DIs: verbal, material, mental, relational and existential&#13;
processes. Verbal, material and mental processes typified security, immigration and human&#13;
trafficking, while relational and existential processes characterised poverty and&#13;
unemployment. The DIs featured nine practs: conscientising, advising, informing, indicting,&#13;
rebuking, warning, supporting, accusing and denying. Conscientising, advising and&#13;
informing were foregrounded in security, immigration and human trafficking; indicting and&#13;
rebuking in poverty and human trafficking; warning and supporting in immigration; and&#13;
accusing and denying in human trafficking. The DIs and practs projected five social actors’&#13;
representations: leaders as guardians (LG), leaders as culprits (LC), migrants as criminals&#13;
(MC), migrants as victims (MV) and youths as ignoramuses (YI). The only positive&#13;
representation was LG (DT and Leadership). The negative representations were LC (DT, TG,&#13;
TS and Punch), MC (DT, TS, TN, Punch and Leadership), MV (TG, Leadership and Punch)&#13;
and YI (TG and Leadership). While LG presented self as foresighted in addressing security&#13;
challenges, LC blamed leaders for the socioeconomic woes of Nigeria; MC represented&#13;
crimes as migrants’ survival strategy; MV uncovered unpalatable experiences of Nigerians&#13;
abroad; and YI depicted ignorance of life abroad as trigger of irregular migration. Four&#13;
ideologies, conveyed in the representations of social actors, were nationalism (TS,&#13;
Leadership and Punch), anti-racism (DT, TS and Punch), humanitarianism (TS, TN and&#13;
Punch) and anti-despotism (TG). Nationalism embodied allegiance to one’s country. Antiracism protested inhuman treatments of Nigerians abroad. Humanitarianism argued for&#13;
migrants’ humanity, while anti-despotism decried leadership irresponsibility.&#13;
The selected Nigerian newspaper reports published in 2015-2021 represent migration as&#13;
socioeconomically engendered through dominant negative discourse representations and&#13;
ideologies.
</summary>
<dc:date>2023-07-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</entry>
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