• English
    • español
  • español 
    • English
    • español
  • Login
Ver ítem 
  •   DSpace Principal
  • 2.- Investigación
  • Artículos
  • Ver ítem
  •   DSpace Principal
  • 2.- Investigación
  • Artículos
  • Ver ítem
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Public perception on immigration and racial discrimination in Spain: a social media analysis using X data

Thumbnail
Ver/
IIT-26-040R_preview.pdf (3.807Kb)
Fecha
2026-12-31
Autor
Botas Etcheverría, Bruno
Cifuentes Quintero, Jenny Alexandra
Jiménez Agudelo, Yury Andrea
Espinosa Ruiz, María Soledad
Estado
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítem
Mostrar METS del ítem
Ver registro en CKH

Refworks Export

Resumen
The increasing use of social media, particularly X (formerly Twitter), has enabled citizens to openly share their views, making it a valuable arena for examining public perceptions of immigration and its intersections with racial discrimination and xenophobia. This study analyzes Spanish digital debates from January 2020 to January 2023 through a mixed methodology that combines text pre-processing, semantic filtering of keywords, topic modeling, and sentiment analysis. A five-topic solution obtained through Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) captured the main dimensions of the discourse: (1) economic and political debates on immigration, (2) international migration and refugee contexts, (3) racism and social discrimination, (4) insults, stereotypes, and xenophobic framings, and (5) small boat arrivals and maritime management. Sentiment analysis using a transformer-based model (roBERTuito) revealed a strong predominance of negativity across all topics, with sharp spikes linked to major migration crises, humanitarian emergencies, and highly mediatized cultural events. Qualitative readings of representative posts further showed that negativity was often articulated through invasion metaphors, securitarian framings, satire, and ridicule, indicating that hostility was not merely reactive but embedded in broader economic, political, and cultural registers. These findings demonstrate that discriminatory discourse in Spain is event-driven, becoming particularly salient during crises and symbolic moments, and underline the persistent role of social media in amplifying racialized exclusion and partisan polarization.
 
The increasing use of social media, particularly X (formerly Twitter), has enabled citizens to openly share their views, making it a valuable arena for examining public perceptions of immigration and its intersections with racial discrimination and xenophobia. This study analyzes Spanish digital debates from January 2020 to January 2023 through a mixed methodology that combines text pre-processing, semantic filtering of keywords, topic modeling, and sentiment analysis. A five-topic solution obtained through Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) captured the main dimensions of the discourse: (1) economic and political debates on immigration, (2) international migration and refugee contexts, (3) racism and social discrimination, (4) insults, stereotypes, and xenophobic framings, and (5) small boat arrivals and maritime management. Sentiment analysis using a transformer-based model (roBERTuito) revealed a strong predominance of negativity across all topics, with sharp spikes linked to major migration crises, humanitarian emergencies, and highly mediatized cultural events. Qualitative readings of representative posts further showed that negativity was often articulated through invasion metaphors, securitarian framings, satire, and ridicule, indicating that hostility was not merely reactive but embedded in broader economic, political, and cultural registers. These findings demonstrate that discriminatory discourse in Spain is event-driven, becoming particularly salient during crises and symbolic moments, and underline the persistent role of social media in amplifying racialized exclusion and partisan polarization.
 
URI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s42001-025-00459-8
http://hdl.handle.net/11531/108472
Public perception on immigration and racial discrimination in Spain: a social media analysis using X data
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistas
ISSN
2432-2717
Materias/ categorías / ODS
Instituto de Investigación Tecnológica (IIT) - Innovación docente y Analytics (GIIDA)
Palabras Clave
Social media · Discrimination · Immigration · Sentiment analysis · Topic modeling
Social media · Discrimination · Immigration · Sentiment analysis · Topic modeling
Colecciones
  • Artículos

Repositorio de la Universidad Pontificia Comillas copyright © 2015  Desarrollado con DSpace Software
Contacto | Sugerencias
 

 

Búsqueda semántica (CKH Explorer)


Listar

Todo DSpaceComunidades & ColeccionesPor fecha de publicaciónAutoresTítulosMateriasPor DirectorPor tipoEsta colecciónPor fecha de publicaciónAutoresTítulosMateriasPor DirectorPor tipo

Mi cuenta

AccederRegistro

Repositorio de la Universidad Pontificia Comillas copyright © 2015  Desarrollado con DSpace Software
Contacto | Sugerencias