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Migration, Gender and Social Justice pp 241–263Cite as

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13 Sub-Saharan Migrants’ Masculinities: An Intersectional Analysis of Media Representations during the Libyan War 2011

13 Sub-Saharan Migrants’ Masculinities: An Intersectional Analysis of Media Representations during the Libyan War 2011

  • Maria DeVargas6 &
  • Stefania Donzelli6 
  • Chapter
  • Open Access
  • First Online: 01 January 2013
  • 15k Accesses

  • 3 Citations

Part of the Hexagon Series on Human and Environmental Security and Peace book series (HSHES,volume 9)

Abstract

Studies of the role of the media in conflict situations have brought to the fore the significance of representations as an important part of the process of knowledge production about wars and the actors involved. The media can influence interpretations and framing of conflicts, moulding specific understandings of their causes and modalities of intervention. The Libyan war in 2011 is an interesting case to reflect on the United Nations (UN) principle of Responsibility to Protect (RtoP), and how conflict affects those populations who occupy a subordinate position in multiple stratification systems (gender, race, and class), whether they are locked in conflict zones or are trying to join the flow of people fleeing across borders. In the context of humanitarian intervention, specific understandings of the migrants as social subjects become strongly correlated with corresponding support mechanisms. This chapter conducts an intersectional analysis to provide a perspective on the politics of the media representation of ‘migrants’ in Libya, discerning the key links between the constructions of their masculinities and the practices of protection for ‘people on the move’. We show how, being situated at the bottom of the social hierarchy in Libya, sub-Saharan black Africans were inappropriately presented in media coverage during the initial phase of the conflict as subjects of adequate protection. Their invisibilization and subordination by the media have been largely framed within international political and economic interests, which have also reinforced the idea of the international community as the legitimate protector of civilians. We argue that these representations reproduce migrants’ vulnerability and, by placing them in a situation of triple jeopardy (structural, political, and representational), undermine the possibility of conceiving and understanding security beyond their ‘naturalized’ victimization and subordination.

Keywords

  • Masculinities
  • intersectionality
  • media representations
  • sub-Saharan migrants
  • Libya
  • human security

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  1. Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

    Maria DeVargas & Stefania Donzelli

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  1. Maria DeVargas
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  1. Internat. Institute of Social Studi, The Hague, The Netherlands

    Thanh-Dam Truong

  2. Internat. Institute of Social Studies, The Hague, The Netherlands

    Des Gasper

  3. Internat. Institute of Social Studies, The Hague, The Netherlands

    Jeff Handmaker

  4. Internat. Institute of Social Studies, The Hague, The Netherlands

    Sylvia I. Bergh

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DeVargas, M., Donzelli, S. (2014). 13 Sub-Saharan Migrants’ Masculinities: An Intersectional Analysis of Media Representations during the Libyan War 2011. In: Truong, TD., Gasper, D., Handmaker, J., Bergh, S. (eds) Migration, Gender and Social Justice. Hexagon Series on Human and Environmental Security and Peace, vol 9. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-28012-2_13

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-28012-2_13

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