Crime & Media - 4.6 Flashcards

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1
Q

Media Rep of Crime (KS)

A

> Wilson & Dickinson (Media Rep)

> Cohen & Young (Social Construction of News, News Values)

> Mandel (Fictional Rep)

> Surette (Fictional Representation (FR) & Law of Opposites, & 3 Recent Trends)

> Osbourne (Crime as Postmodern Spectacle)

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2
Q

Examples of Media Distortion of Crime

A

> Overreps violent & sexual crime

> Criminals & V’s portrayed as older & more MC > reality

> Exaggerate police success in clearing up cases

> Exaggerate risk of victimisation

> Reported as series of separate events

> Overplays extraordinary crime

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3
Q

Overreps violent & sexual crime - Examples of Media Distortion of Crime

A

Most media reports on this area, but made up only 3% of recorded crime

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4
Q

Criminals & V’s portrayed as older & more MC > reality - Examples of Media Distortion of Crime

A

> e.g. Felson - Age Fallacy

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5
Q

Exaggerate police success in clearing up cases - Examples of Media Distortion of Crime

A

> Police big source of info & present themselves in positive light talking to Journalist

> Journalist modify rep of police as good, so continue to give them + info

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6
Q

Exaggerate risk of victimisation - Examples of Media Distortion of Crime

A

e.g. of women, white ppl & MC+, but in reality their - likely to be V’s

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7
Q

Reported as series of separate events - Examples of Media Distortion of Crime

A

Rather than being linked to underlying causes & no discussion on what these are

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8
Q

Overplays extraordinary crime - Examples of Media Distortion of Crime

A

> e.g. Feslon - Dramatic Fallacy e.g. media wants to focus on dramatic crimes to get ppl enagaged.

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9
Q

Social Construction of News - Cohen & Young

A

> Media gives distorted pic of crime, so is SC, news isn’t discovered but manufactured

> Not simply out their to be collected, rather process of selection/rejection occurs

> So some stories are selected & others rejected

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10
Q

News Values - Cohen & Young

A

Criteria used to decide if story is newsworthy enough & has + chance of making news if it meets values

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11
Q

Examples of News Values

A

> Risk: V stories on vulnerability & fear
Violence: Visual & spectucular acts

> Celebrities
> Unexpectedness 
> Personalisation: Human interests stories about individuals 
> Immediacy: Breaking News
> Dramatisation: Action & Excitement
> Simplification: Clear stories

RV CUPIDS

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12
Q

Link vs News Values & Crime

A

Media give lots of attention to crime as it focuses on unusual & abnormal behaviour, making it + newsworthy

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13
Q

Mandel - Fictional Representations

A

> From 1945-85, 10 bil crime thrillers sold & 20% of films are crime-related

> So influence our understanding of crime.

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14
Q

Surette - Fictional Representation (FR) & Law of Opposites

A

> FR are direct opposite to OS = news coverage e.g. property crimes is underep & violence & sex crime are overep

> FR of sex crimes are done by psychopathic stranger, but irl usually acquaintances

> FR of cops always seen as getting their man, but lots of crimes are unsolved

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15
Q

Surette - Fictional Representation (FR) & Law of Opposites (3 Recent Trends)

A

> ‘Reality’ now feature young, non-white offenders.

>

  • tendency to see police as corrupt & brutal

> V’s more central, w/ law enforcers seen as avenger & audiences invited to identify w/ suffering

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16
Q

Osbourne - Crime as Postmodern Spectacle

A

> Media reporting of crime driven by need for a spectacle.

> Engaging as audiences are repelled by activities & fascinated @ = time.

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17
Q

Media as a Cause of Crime

A

> Tumber (Fear of Crime)
Greer & Reiner (Fear of Crime)

> Lea & Young (Media, RD & Crime)

> Hayward & Young - Cultural Criminology (Media-Scape)

> Fenwick & Hayward - Cultural Criminology (Media & Commodification)

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18
Q

General view on Media as cause of Crime

A

> Negative effect on young & WC, rap lyrics, horror films & games

> e.g. GTA criticised for encouraging violence & criminality.

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19
Q

Ways in Media Causes Crime

A
> Imitation
> Arousal
> Desensitisation
> Transmitting Knowledge
> Stimulating desires for unaffordable goods 
> Glamourisation of Offending
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20
Q

Imitation

A

Copycat behaviour e.g. deviant role models

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21
Q

Arousal

A

Viewing violent /sexual imagery.

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22
Q

Desensitisation

A

Repeated violent/sexual imagery.

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23
Q

Transmitting Knowledge

A

Of criminal techniques

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24
Q

Stimulating desires for unaffordable goods

A

e.g. through advertising leading to innovation/LR & RD

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25
Q

Glamourisation of Offending

A

Making it seem cool

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26
Q

Criticisms of Media Causing Crime

A

Research shows exposure to media violence, has little neg effect

27
Q

Livingstone - Criticisms of Media Causing Crime

A

Despite findings, societies still obsessed by desire for childhood to be GA of innocence

28
Q

Media & Fear of Crime

A

> Media exaggerate violent crime & risks of certain groups becomming V’s e.g. young w & oap

> Causing unrealistic fear of crime

29
Q

Tumber - Fear of Crime

A

>

  • media use correlates w/ + levels of fear of crime

> e.g. tabloid & heavy TV users show + fear of becoming a V of mugging or physical attack

30
Q

Criticisms of Tumber

A

> Correlation don’t prove media viewing causes fear

> e.g. those already fearful of going out @ night, watch + TV as they stay in more

31
Q

Greer & Reiner - Fear of Crime

A

> Ignores ppl give diff meanings to media violence e.g. in cartoons, horror flims & news

> Shows interactionist idea if we want to look @ effects of media, need look @ meanings of what they see & read

32
Q

Lea & Young - Media, RD & Crime

A

> Media + RD among poor =, who have media access & presented w/ images of materialistic ideal life to strive towards

> Stimulates RD & social exclusion felt by poor, who can’t afford material goods, so turn to crime

33
Q

Cultural Criminology - Hayward & Young (Media-Scape)

A

> In media-saturated society now immersed in media scape incl. images of crime

> Blurs boundary vs image & reality

> e.g. gang assaults staged for camera & put together in underground fight videos

34
Q

Cultural Criminology - Fenwick & Hayward (Media & Commodification)

A

> Images of crime used to sell product, so it becomes a style to be consumed & marketed to youth as e.g. romantic & exciting

> Fashion industry trades on images of forbidden brands e.g. Opium, Poison & Obsession & S60

> Works opposite way too e.g. if brands associated w/ criminality it’s banned in pubs & clubs & become tools of classification for potential criminals

35
Q

Moral Panic

A

Exaggerated & irrational overreaction by society to a perceived problem.

36
Q

Criticisms of Definition of Moral Panic

A

Who decides if societal reaction is overreaction, LR & RR argue ppl’s fear of crime is rational

37
Q

Process of Moral Panic

A

> Media see group as threat to societal values, negatively stereotyping them, exaggerates issue

> ME reject behaviour, leads to call for crackdown, creating SFP & amplifies issue causing initial panic

> e.g. special drug squad, so police discover more drug taking

> Crackdown identifies + deviants, calls for tougher action, creates DAS

38
Q

Moral Panic (KS)

A

> Cohen (Moral Panic & Mods & Rockers & Wider-Context)

> Functionalism

> Neo Marxist

39
Q

Cohen - Moral Panic & Mods & Rockers

A

> 2 teen subcultures were initially friends & not deviant but their were confrontations during easter weekend

> e.g. a few scuffles & minor property damage, exaggerated by media

> Overnight a new folk devil was created & created MP

40
Q

3 Elements to Media Exaggeration of Mods & Rockers

A

> Symbolisation
Exaggeration & Distortion
Prediction

41
Q

Symbolisation - 3 Elements to Media Exaggeration of Mods & Rockers

A

> Media used symbolic shorthands e.g. hairstyles, clothing & music as icons of troublemakers

> Provided list 2 wider society to beware of these ppl & so negatively labelled

> Media use of symbols allowed them to link, unconnected events

42
Q

Exaggeration & Distortion - 3 Elements to Media Exaggeration of Mods & Rockers

A

> Media exaggerated NO’s & seriousness of violence & damage, distorting pic, through sensational headlines

> Non-events even reported as news e.g. invasions not materialising

43
Q

Prediction - 3 Elements to Media Exaggeration of Mods & Rockers

A

> Media predicted + conflict would ensue

44
Q

2 Stages to how Media created DAS

A

> Making problem appear out of hand

> Amplified deviance defining 2 groups & emphasising supposed diff

45
Q

Making problem appear out of hand - 2 Stages to how Media created DAS

A

Led to calls for + control response by police & courts & further stigma of M&R as deviants & - tolerant of them

46
Q

Amplified deviance defining 2 groups & emphasising supposed diff - 2 Stages to how Media created DAS

A

> So more youths adopted these styles & attracted + participants for future clashes

> Encouraged SFP as youths acted out roles media gave them

> In large scales societies, most have no exp of event, so rely on media, allowing them to portray them as folk devils

47
Q

Cohen - Wider Context, Moral Panic & M&R

A

> MP due to boundary crisis, uncertainty on boundary vs moral & immoral behaviour @ time of social change

> Folk devils give focus to popular anxieties about social disorder

48
Q

Functionalist view on Moral Panics

A

> MP responds to anomie created by change, dramatises threat to society through image of FD

> So media raises CC & reassert social control when central values are threatened.

49
Q

NM view on Moral Panics

A

> NM used concept of MP e.g. Hall, argue MP on mugging used to distract attention from crisis of capitalism

> Dividing WC on racial grounds & legitimate authoritarian rule.

50
Q

General Criticisms of Moral Panic

A

> Why some problems are amplified & others not, why do they die down instead of increasing infinitely

51
Q

A03 Criticisms of MP (KS)

A

> LR

> McRobbie & Thornton (Frequency & Context)

52
Q

LR - Criticisms of MP

A

> Assumes societal reaction is overtop, but who decides what’s proportionate reaction or panicky 1

> LR feel fear of crime is rational

53
Q

McRobbie & Thornton - Frequency

A

Of MP has + so not noteworthy

54
Q

McRobbie & Thornton - Context

A

> Little consensus > deviancy e.g. LPF, Pre-Martial Sex,

> No longer seen as deviant, so harder for media to create MP

55
Q

Global Cyber-Crime (KS)

A

> Thomas & Loader (Definition of Cybercrime)

> Jewkes (New Opportunities)

> Wall (4 Categories of Cybercrime)

56
Q

Thomas & Loader - Definition of Cybercrime

A

Computer-mediated activities illegal or illicit & done through global electronic networks

57
Q

Jewkes - New Opportunities

A

Internet creates chance to do conventional crimes e.g. fraud & new crimes w/ tools e.g. software piracy

58
Q

Wall - 4 Categories of Cybercrime

A

> Cyber-Trespass
Cyber-Deception
Cyber-Porn
Cyber-Violence

59
Q

Cyber-Trespass

A

Hacking others property e.g. spreading viruses

60
Q

Cyber-Deception

A

Identity theft e.g. phishing & violation of intellectual property rights e.g. illegal downloading

61
Q

Cyber-Pornography

A

Involves minor & chances for kids to access it on the net

62
Q

Cyber-Violence

A

Physiological harm e.g. cyberstalking, hate crimes vs minority groups & text-bullying

63
Q

Policing Cyber Crime

A

> Difficult due to scale of internet, limited resources of police & globalised nature

> But new ICT, gives police & state + chances to surveil pop

> e.g. CCTV, Electronic Databases, Fingerprints etc