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Main Authors: Ghafouri, Vahid, McNeil, Robert, Yankov, Teodor, Sumption, Madeleine, Rocher, Luc, Hale, Scott A., Mahdi, Adam
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.14197
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author Ghafouri, Vahid
McNeil, Robert
Yankov, Teodor
Sumption, Madeleine
Rocher, Luc
Hale, Scott A.
Mahdi, Adam
author_facet Ghafouri, Vahid
McNeil, Robert
Yankov, Teodor
Sumption, Madeleine
Rocher, Luc
Hale, Scott A.
Mahdi, Adam
contents We present a large-scale computational analysis of migration-related discourse in UK parliamentary debates spanning over 75 years and compare it with US congressional discourse. Using open-weight LLMs, we annotate each statement with high-level stances toward migrants and track the net tone toward migrants across time and political parties. For the UK, we extend this with a semi-automated framework for extracting fine-grained narrative frames to capture nuances of migration discourse. Our findings show that, while US discourse has grown increasingly polarised, UK parliamentary attitudes remain relatively aligned across parties, with a persistent ideological gap between Labour and the Conservatives, reaching its most negative level in 2025. The analysis of narrative frames in the UK parliamentary statements reveals a shift toward securitised narratives such as border control and illegal immigration, while longer-term integration-oriented frames such as social integration have declined. Moreover, discussions of national law about immigration have been replaced over time by international law and human rights, revealing nuances in discourse trends. Taken together broadly, our findings demonstrate how LLMs can support scalable, fine-grained discourse analysis in political and historical contexts.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2509_14197
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Framing Migration: A Computational Analysis of UK Parliamentary Discourse
Ghafouri, Vahid
McNeil, Robert
Yankov, Teodor
Sumption, Madeleine
Rocher, Luc
Hale, Scott A.
Mahdi, Adam
Computation and Language
Computers and Society
We present a large-scale computational analysis of migration-related discourse in UK parliamentary debates spanning over 75 years and compare it with US congressional discourse. Using open-weight LLMs, we annotate each statement with high-level stances toward migrants and track the net tone toward migrants across time and political parties. For the UK, we extend this with a semi-automated framework for extracting fine-grained narrative frames to capture nuances of migration discourse. Our findings show that, while US discourse has grown increasingly polarised, UK parliamentary attitudes remain relatively aligned across parties, with a persistent ideological gap between Labour and the Conservatives, reaching its most negative level in 2025. The analysis of narrative frames in the UK parliamentary statements reveals a shift toward securitised narratives such as border control and illegal immigration, while longer-term integration-oriented frames such as social integration have declined. Moreover, discussions of national law about immigration have been replaced over time by international law and human rights, revealing nuances in discourse trends. Taken together broadly, our findings demonstrate how LLMs can support scalable, fine-grained discourse analysis in political and historical contexts.
title Framing Migration: A Computational Analysis of UK Parliamentary Discourse
topic Computation and Language
Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.14197