ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

Overheating hatreds: local responses to forced migration in Hungary

Ethnic Conflict
Islam
Nationalism
Political Violence
Religion
Immigration
Cathrine Thorleifsson
Universitetet i Oslo
Cathrine Thorleifsson
Universitetet i Oslo

Abstract

This paper analyses political responses to forced migration in Hungary. Based on multi-sided fieldwork in 2015, it explores how the boundaries of the nation were reinforced and reconfigured in relation to migrants in transit on their way to other European destinations. Examining discourses and practices of the radial right, it argues that violent imaginaries of the alleged threats posed by migrants from Muslim majority lands to Christian civilization, national cohesion and culture were heating old and new hatreds. An Islamophobic layer emerged in the far right´s grammar of exclusion that traditionally has targeted the country´s Roma minority and Jews. At the same time, concerned Hungarians contested racialised securitization, reinscribing bios to ‘human waste’ deemed disruptive by the nation-state. The contradictory interpretations of migrants as waste or value, burden or benefit, parallel struggles over statehood and identity in globalised Hungary- between a society open to diversification processes and one that closes its borders to difference, on a sliding path towards an illiberal state.