Abstract
Parliamentary discourse, as a formal, ritualized and highly confrontational subgenre of political discourse, engages in political deliberation and decision-making along the partisan agendas of the MPs. Given that discourses enacted in Parliament not only reflect, but also discursively formulate socio-political and ideological configurations, among others in the field of the politics of otherness, the aim of this paper is to explore the linguistic representations of mobile populations in a corpus of Greek parliamentary data, in order to ultimately examine their semantic prosody and ideological connotations within the framework of Critical Discourse Analysis.
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