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Media representations of crime:
Crime and deviance make up a large proportion of news coverage:
Does the media reflect/ mirror society?
Media coverage is highly selective:
The Media use 'interpretative frameworks' or 'frames': - Stuart Hall (1973)
The media distort the image of crime – what do the official statistics say?
The media over-represent violent and sexual crime: Ditton and Duffy found media reports would only show sexual/violent crimes - but this only made up 3% of crime statistics
The media portray criminals and victims as older and more middle-class: than those typically found in the criminal justice system. Felson calls this the 'age fallacy'.
Media coverage exaggerates police success: in clearing up cases, this is partly because the police are a major source of crime stories and want to present themselves in a good light.
The media exaggerates the risk of victimisation: especially to women, white people are higher-status individuals.
Crime is reported as a series of separate events: without structure and without examining underlying causes
The media overplay extraordinary crimes: and underplay ordinary crimes. Felson calls this 'dramatic fallacy', the media images lead us to believe that to commit crime you need to be clever - Felson calls this 'ingenuity fallacy'.
Felson argues that the media can be guilty of presenting a picture of the patterns of crime and deviance that is far from the real thing. He argued that the media makes up the following areas in their reporting of the true nature of crime:
Age fallacy: the media portrays criminals and victims as older and more middle-class than those typically involved in the criminal justice system.
Dramatic fallacy: the media focuses on violent and extraordinary crimes and underplays ordinary crimes.
Ingenuity fallacy: media gives the impression that criminals are clever, yet most crime is opportunistic
Victimisation fallacy: the media gives the impression that women and white individuals are most likely to be victims of crime.
Police fallacy: The media gives the impression that the police are more efficient and noble than they really are.
Agenda setting: the idea that the media have a powerful influence over the issues that people think about because the agenda is already set by journalists.
This is because people can only discuss and form views about the issues they've been informed about.
The power that journalists and others working in newsrooms have in society is clearly extensive.
By having the ability to set the agenda, journalists decide the main topics of discussion for people in society. This can mean the public never discusses some subjects because they are not aware they're on the agenda for discussion.
Media representations may therefore influence what people believe about crime and deviance, regardless of whether or not these are accurate. 📝Example: the sun didn't cover the breaking of COVID rules by the Prime Minister/ government 'party gate' - because the editor was there.
Greer and Reiner point out that the media are always seeking out newsworthy stories of crime and deviance, and they exploit the possibilities for a 'good story' by dramatising, exaggerating, over-reporting and sensationalising some crimes out of all proportion to their actual extent in society. They do this in order to generate audience interest and encourage audiences to consume or buy their media products.
Jewkes suggests that news values guide the choices writers, editors and journalists make when they decide what stories are newsworthy to report and what to leave out.
Greer suggests that it is these news values that explain why all mainstream media tend to exaggerate the extent of violent crime, and why the media fixates on whether a celebrity deviates/ commits a crime/
News values = immediacy, threshold, proximity, predictability, simplification, individualism, spectacle, celebrity/ high status, risk.
The presence of these news values in crime stories explains the priority given in both tabloid newspapers and broadcast news, to sexual and violent crimes.
In contrast, stories about crime rarely focus on economic crimes (although they may have a section in the business sections of the quality broadsheet newspapers)
It means that those committing these crimes (wealthy individuals/corporations) aren't being punished but also means this type of deviance is 'being marked off from real crime'. The backwards law: Public Perceptions and the Distortion and Exaggeration of Crime:
Surveys (such as the CSEW) show that the majority of people base their knowledge of crime and the CJS on the media rather than direct experience.
However, Surette (2010) suggests that there is what he calls a 'backwards law' with the media constructing images of crime and justice which are an opposite or backwards version of reality.
Greer and Reiner suggest this backwards law is shown by media news and fiction misrepresenting the reality of crime in the following ways:
By hugely over-representing and exaggerating sex, drugs and serious violence-related crimes and by under-representing the risks of the most common offence of property crime.
By portraying property crime as far more serious and violent than most recorded offences, which are fairly routine and trivial.
By over-exaggerating the risks of becoming victims faced by higher-status white people, older people, women and children.
By emphasising individual incidents of crime, rather than providing an understanding or analysis of crime patterns or the causes of crime. Fictional representations of crime:
We don't just get our images of crime from the media
Fictional representations from the TV, cinema and novels are also important sources of info = so much of their output is crime-related.
Ernest Mandel estimates 1945 to 1984 over 10 billion crime thrillers were sold globally. Press reporting of rape and sexual assault:
Mariah (2008) analysed a random sample of 136 news articles about rape and sexual assault of girls and women by men and boys that appeared in UK national newspapers and on BBC in 2006.
She argues that the way in which these offences are reported construct rape as an outdoor crime committed by monsters/strangers, who may be foreign and use extreme violence to overpower a victim.
This construction is way out of line with the picture that emerges from social research - but how? Facts to prove:
Although only 13% of rapes take place in public places these account for 54% of press reports of rape.
Attacks against underage girls are over-reported by the press while attacks against adult women are underreported.
How does the media cause crime?
Ways that the media possibly causes crime and deviance:
**1)**The media relative deprivation and crime:
A03: Not everyone who feels relatively deprived will commit a crime.
2 The media commodifies crime: contrastingly cultural criminology argues that the media turns crime into the commodity that people desire - media encourages individuals to consume crime.
Cultural criminologists Hayward and Young (2012) see late modernity as media-saturated - we are in a 'mediascape' (an ever-expanding tangle of fluid, digital images, including images of crime).
There is a blurring between the image and reality of crime - the difference between how crime is presented in media and real statistics. Media commodifies crime: a further feature of late modernity is the emphasis on consumption, excitement and immediacy:
Crime and its thrills become commodified - corporations and advertisers use media images of crime to sell products, especially to the youth market.
Youth market = for example 'gangster rap' and hip hop combine images of street hustlers' criminality with images of success in doing so
Hip hop stars wear designer clothes and have expensive cars, champagne and women = this drives the desire to commit crime.
Crime and deviance become a style to be consumed.
Fenwick and Hayward: "Crime is packaged and marketed to the young market as a romantic, exciting, cool and fashionable cultural symbol.
Counter-cultures are packaged and sold, for example, graffiti is the marker of deviant urban cool which the media have now jumped on.
Companies are moral panics, controversy and scandal to market their products. A03: People have agency/choice. They make rational choices on whether to pursue a life of crime just because their favourite rappers do (right realists). Although RR would argue also that the w/c may be more susceptible to following this way of life = socialisation and the underclass.
3) Moral Panics and Deviance Amplification:
Moral Panic = widespread feelings of anxiety and concern held by the general public that develop for a certain reason:
Concern = belief that the behaviour of the group or activity will have a negative effect on society.
Hostility = hostility towards the subject = they become 'folk devils'
Consensus = widespread agreement needed that the group poses a threat
Disproportionality = the level of anxiety and concern is disproportionate to the actual threat posed by the accused group.
Volatility = moral panics are highly volatile = they;'' disappear as quickly as they appear (is this true though?) Moral panics go through several stages, with the media implicated at every stage:
The news media report on the event
Moral entrepreneurs react to the media reports condemning it = they insist on the police ect take action
The media oversimplifies the problem and begins to demonise the group as a social problem (folk devils are now created).
Authorises stamp down hard on the group/activity (police stop and search, courts harsher sentences, governments introduce new laws)
The reporting of the incidents increase = more visible
The media reports the arrests = fulfilling the initial media prophecy
The group react to the moral panic by becoming more deviant in protest etc. A02 examples: Cohens - mods and rockers, Young's study of hippie marihuana users in Notting Hill, Hall's policing the crisis.
The media present the group in a negative, stereotypical fashion and exaggerate the scale of the problem
Moral entrepreneurs, editors, politicians, police chiefs, bishops and other 'respectable' people condemn the group and its behaviour
-This usually leads to a 'crackdown' on groups, however, this creates a self-fulfilling prophecy that amplifies the problem that caused the panic in the first place – for example, setting up more drug squads leads the police to discover more drug usage or dealings. As the 'crackdown' catches more deviants, members of the public will demand more tougher actions from them.
Mods and Rockers:
Cohen argues that the media's portrayal of events produced a deviance amplification spiral by making it seem as if the problem was spreading and getting out of hand – this led to an increased control response from police and this produced further marginalisation of mods and rockers.
The media amplified the defiance – youths began to accept their labels - they went from being groups to gangs & self-fulfilling prophecy took place.
Cohen argues the media's exaggeration caused the situation to become more serious. The wider context:
Cohen argues moral panic occurs during periods of social change – people fear change and new adaptations. He argued moral panic was a result of boundary crisis = uncertainty between acceptable and unacceptable behaviour in a time of change.
From a functionalist perspective, moral panics can be seen as a way of responding to anomie or 'normlessness' created by change – by dramatising threats, it creates great fear.
Stuart Hall et al (Neo-Marxists) argue the role of moral panics is to serve capitalism by segregating the working class and middle class. Criticisms:
It assumes societal reactions are over-exaggerated, so what would be the best response? A03 - Evaluation of Moral panics and deviance amplification spiral as a cause of crime:
Strength ( comment ): provides powerful ways of understanding the relationship between crime/ deviance and the media
Weakness ( evaluation): assumes that the societal reaction is a disproportionate overreaction - but who is to decide what is a proportionate reaction and what is a panicky one?
Media violence and real-life violence:
Bandura's Bobo Doll Experiment:
Counter evaluation: James Bulger's case
For - yes it can:
McCabe and Martin (2005) = that imitation was a likely outcome of media violence because it is the hero who uses it to deal with a problem = they go unpublished and also receive rewards.
They also believe media violence has a disinhibition effect - it convinces children that in some situations 'normal rules' that govern conflict can be suspended = instead, discussion and negotiation can be replaced by violence. A02: McCabe and Martin's views are supported by Kevin Browne (a consultant to the Home Affairs Committee investigation of knife crime, 2009) who argued that there are 'well established short-term effects of children or teenagers watching violent video films or playing violent computer games and then behaving aggressively in the hours and weeks afterwards. Media violence may have a 'drip drip' effect on young people over the course of their children and result in their becoming desensitised to violence.
Newton - Desensitisation = Newton argues that as children and teenagers become so used to seeing violence through the media, they become socialised into accepting violent behaviour as normal = people now have weaker moral codes (especially the younger generation)
Against - no it doesn't:
What are the effects of media coverage of crime? - new media
New media refers to means of mass communication that use digital technologies such as the internet
It also includes social media where people can communicate with others online
The research of such media has grown spectacularly in recent years.
According to the ONS: 90% of households in GB in 2018 had internet access
According to Ofcom: roughly Âľ of internet users in the UK in 2018 had a social media profile. The new media and crime:
New media has offered criminals the opportunity to commit old crimes in new ways (e.g. terrorist offences) but also opportunities to commit a wide range of entirely new types of crime (such as computer hacking) - such offences are known as cybercrimes Cybercrimes: this refers to a wide range of criminal acts committed via the use of ICT - usually the internet. Cybercrime is the fastest-growing criminal activity in the world.
Cyber-dependant crimes: illegal intrusions such as hacking or disruption, downgrading of computer functionality and network space e.g. malware attacks.
Cyber-enabled crimes: fraud, piracy, counterfeiting, forgery, cyber bullying/ trolling offences, cyberstalking and harassment, child sexual offences.
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