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A Qualitative Content Analysis Of How Vulnerable Eu-Citizens Are Portrayed In Swedish Media
Author(s) -
Dr R. Arasu
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
journal of psychology and political science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2799-1024
DOI - 10.55529/jpps.22.1.4
Subject(s) - directive , member state , european union , political science , free movement , phenomenon , order (exchange) , politics , member states , content analysis , state (computer science) , freedom of movement , capital (architecture) , focus group , law , public relations , business , sociology , international trade , geography , social science , physics , finance , algorithm , quantum mechanics , marketing , computer science , programming language , archaeology
On 30 April 2004 The Eu Directive 2004/38/Ec Entered Into Force And Defined Eu-citizens’ right to free movement within the European Union. This directive gives EU-citizens the right to move freely between member states in up to three months. In order to reside for a longer period, the EU-citizens must comply to a certain set ofrules and qualifications. They must either be employed, registered as students or possess enough economic capital so that neither themselves nor their family risk being a burden on the social assistance system of the host member state. The directive sets up a legal frameworkwhere individuals not qualifying are theoretically experiencing their movement somewhat restricted. Furthermore, the people not qualifying within the directive’s requirements are at risk of being depicted as unwanted EU-citizens in political discourses. In this article I examine this phenomenon with a specific focus on the group vulnerable EU-citizens in Sweden and how they are portrayed in Swedish media.

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