“…Forcibly displaced people's humanitarian images have generally changed from heroic, politicized individuals in the Cold War period to, mirroring media and political discourses (supra), anonymous, voiceless, depoliticized, dehistoricized, decontextualized, universalized, racialized, and/or victimized masses from the "Global South," mostly involving (innocent and vulnerable-looking) women and children as "ideal victims" (Höijer, 2004;Johnson, 2011b). Recognizing important genre differences (Ongenaert and Joye, in review), mainly refugee organizations, celebrities, and other humanitarian actors obtain voices about forcibly displaced people, largely neglecting and dehumanizing forcibly displaced people themselves (Chouliaraki, 2012;Ongenaert and Joye, 2019). These discursive transformations interact with the aforementioned policy shifts and serve to mobilize public support and manage forcibly displaced people's perceived threats (Johnson, 2011b).…”