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Crime and Deviance

      Media
Lesson Objectives
• Introduce how the media portray crime
• Look at ways in which the media might
  be a cause of crime and of the fear of
  crime
• Look at the role the media play in
  creating moral panics
Starter
• How does the media represent Crime
  and Deviance?
• Can they be accused of
  sensationalisation?
• Do they cause a moral panic?
• What folk devils have been created
  from Media Coverage?
Facts
• Richard Ericson et al’s (1991) study of
  Toronto found that 45-71% of the press
  and radio news was about deviance and its
  control
• Williams & Dickinson (1993)- British
  newspapers devote up to 30% of their
  news space to crime
• While the news media show an interest in
  crime, they give a distorted image of
  crime, criminals and policing (compared to OS)
Key Words
• Age Fallacy- media representations give
  impression that all age groups are involved in crime
• Dramatic Fallacy- the media focus on violent
  crimes therefore creating fear of crime esp among
  elderly and women by over focusing on crimes
  against these groups
• Ingenuity Fallacy- Media give impression that
  criminals are clever, yet most crime is opportunistic
• Class Fallacy- Media give impression that M/C are
  more likely to be victims of crime
• Police Fallacy- Media give impression that the
  police are more efficient than they really are
News Values and Crime Coverage
• The distorted picture of crime painted
  by the news media reflects the fact
  that news is a social construction.
• Cohen & Young- news is not discovered
  but manufactured (some stories
  selected, while others are rejected)
• News value- criteria by which
  journalists and editors decide whether
  a story is newsworthy
• Key News Values influencing the selection
  of crime stories include:
1. Immediacy
2.Dramatisation- action & excitement
3.Personalisation- human interest stories
   about individuals e.g. Violent & sexual crimes
4.Higher Status persons- e.g. celebrities
5.Simplification- eliminating shades of grey
6.Novelty or unexpectedness- new angle
7.Risk- victim centred stories
8.Violence- visible and spectacular acts
Activity
• Using the same newspapers as earlier
  find some crime stories in the national
  and local press. Which news values do
  the stories reflect?
Fictional Representations of Crime

• Fictional representations of crime form
  TV, cinema and novels are important
  sources of our knowledge of crime (a lot
  of their output is crime related)
• Mandel (1984)- from 1945- 1984 over 10
  billion crime thrillers were sold
  worldwide, 25% of prime time TV and
  20% of films are crime shows or movies
  (what examples are there?)
• Fictional representations follow
  Surette’s ‘law of opposites’ (opp to OS,
  and similar to news coverage).
• Property crime is under represented,
  while violence, drugs and sex crimes are
  over represented
• Fictional sex crimes are committed by
  psychopaths, not acquaintances
• Fictional cops usually catch the bad guy
• However three recent trends are worth
   noting:
1. Reality shows tend to feature young,
   non white ‘underclass’ offenders
2.There is an increasing tendency to show
   police as corrupt, brutal and less
   successful
3.Victims have become more central, with
   police portrayed as avengers and
   audiences invited to identify with their
   suffering
The Media as a cause of Crime
• Concern that media has –ve effect on
  attitudes, values and behaviour (esp. on
  young, lower class and uneducated)
• Blame for decline in behaviour shifted
  from cinema-horror comics-video
  nasties-rap lyrics and now computer
  games
Ways in which the media may
            cause C&D
• Imitation- providing deviant role models,
  resulting in copycat behaviour (Bandura)
• Arousal- through viewing violent imagery
• Desensitisation- repeatedly viewing violence
• Transmitting knowledge of criminal
  techniques
• Target of crime e.g. Theft of plasma TV’s
• Stimulating desires for unaffordable goods-
  through advertising
• Glamourising offending
AO2
• Most studies have found that exposure
  to media violence has at most a small
  and limited –ve effect on audiences
• Sociologists note that this link is
  simplistic because it fails to recognise
  that audiences differ in terms of age,
  social class, IQ and level of education
  and so do not react in the same way to
  media content
AO2
• Fails to appreciate nature of violence
  caused by a range of factors e.g. Poor
  socialisation, bad parenting, peer group
  influences, mental illness, drugs and
  alcohol
• Most research uses lab experiments
  (allows control of variables however
  artificiality undermines validity), also
  cannot measure LT effects
Fear of Crime
• The media exaggerate the amount of
  violent crime and the risks of certain
  groups becoming victims e.g. Young women
  and elderly
• Research to an extent supports the view
  that media cause fear of crime
• Schlesinger & Tumbler (1992)- tabloid
  readers and heavy users of TV expressed
  greater fear of going out at night and of
  becoming victims
Media, Relative Deprivation and Crime

• Left Realists argue that the mass media help
  to increase the sense of relative deprivation
  (feelings of deprivation relative to others)
  among poor and marginalised social groups
• In today’s society even the poorest have
  media access, the media present people with
  images of a materialistic ‘good life’ as a goal
  to which they should strive
• Stimulating the sense of relative deprivation
  and social exclusion felt by marginalised
  groups who cannot afford the goods
• As Merton suggests pressure to
  conform to the norm can cause deviant
  behaviour when the opportunity to
  achieve by legitimate means is blocked.
• The media is instrumental in setting the
  norm and therefore promoting crime.
Stan Cohen
• Moral Panic: An exaggerated over reaction by society to a
  perceived problem- driven/inspired by Media

• Media plays a crucial role in the social construction of C&D

• Distorting and exaggeration by the media create a public
  reaction. This leads to the public labelling certain groups (sfp).

• Moral entrepreneurs: editors, police officers, politicians, legal
  profession.

• The media interest and exaggerated reporting leads to a social
  reaction and amplification (a deviancy amplification spiral), as
  more interest in fact leads to the identification of more of the
  offending behaviour.

• Selective reporting actually creates the crime problem.
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?
  v=19xJIedrrfA
Mods and Rockers (pg 122)
• Who were the Mods & Rockers?
• What happened in Clacton during the Easter
  Weekend?
• The media over-reaction to the events involved 3
  elements, what were they?
• How was the turn of events linked to the idea of
  deviance amplification spiral?
• How did the Media’s definition of the situation create
  a Moral Panic?
• How does Cohen link moral panics to a ‘boundary
  crisis’?
• What criticism of moral panics are there?
Perspectives of Moral Panics
• Functionalism- see moral panics as ways of
  responding to the sense of anomie
  (normlessness) created by change. By
  dramatising the threat to society in the form
  of a folk devil, the media raise the collective
  consciousness and reassert social controls
  when central values are threatened.
• Neo-Marxism- Hall et al argue that the
  moral panic over ‘mugging’ served to distract
  attention from the crisis of capitalism (dividing
  W/C on racial grounds)
H/W
• Thomas and Loader (2000)- cyber crime
  is computer mediated activities that are
  either illegal or considered illicit, and
  are conducted through global electronic
  networks
1. Read through Global cyber crime and summarise



2. Mind map Crime and Media topic
Essay Practice
• Examine some of the ways in which
  deviance may be related to the mass
  media (21m)
The media and crime            News as socially constructed         Fictional crime
 The media over-represent     ‘The news is not discovered but      Our ideas of crime
 violence and sex crimes –     manufactured’ says Cohen and         don’t just come from
 this make us think its        Young. What they mean is what        the news. Fictional
 happening more and that       gets coverage depends on what        representation of
 most killers are strange      has happened, who is involved,       crime comes from
 psychopaths – in most         when and where. Crime by its         books, films and TV
 cases the perpetrator is      very definition is abnormal and      shows. They tend to
 know to the victim.           ticks most of these news worthy      match the incorrect
                               boxes.                               stereotypes of the
 The media portray
                                                                    media.
  criminals and victims as          Mass media and
  older and more middle-
                                    crime
  class.
                               Can the media cause             How could the media
 Media coverage                                                 cause crime?
  exaggerates police success   crime or fear?
  in clearing up cases.        Most studies show media          Imitation – copycats.
 The media exaggerates the    violence has at most a small     Desensitisation.
  risk of victimisation,       and limited negative effect
                               on audiences. Studies do         Learning criminal
  especially women.                                              techniques.
                               show those that watch TV
 The media overplay           for longer periods of time       Desire for
  extraordinary crimes but     are more likely to be fearful     unaffordable goods.
  underplay ordinary crimes.   of becoming a victim.
                                                                Glamorising offending.
New media – new crime                           Cyber-crime
Cinema, television, computer games and the       Cyber-trespass – includes hacking and
internet have all been blamed for                 spreading viruses.
corrupting the young. The internet has
grown so quickly its brought about cyber         Cyber –deception and theft – identify
crime. Defined as computer-meditated              theft, illegal downloading.
criminal activities conducted through global     Cyber-pornography – illegal porn involving
electronic networks.                              children.
                                                 Cyber-violence – bullying by text,
                                                  threatening e-mails, cyber stalking.

   Stanley Cohen                     Mass media and
                                     crime
   Cohen studied how the
   media has often demonised
   youth culture. This                         Deviancy amplification spiral
   happened to mods and
   Rockers in 1964 who were                    This idea says that sensationalist
   seen as modern day folk                     reporting by the newspapers distorts the
   devils who threatened                       act of crime or deviance and increases
   social order. His research                  public awareness. Public pressure is put
   found that actual acts of                   on the police and courts to act. This
   deviant acts were minimal.                  creates a moral panic where certain acts
                                               or groups are seen as a threat to social
                                               order.

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Media's Role in Crime and Deviance

  • 2. Lesson Objectives • Introduce how the media portray crime • Look at ways in which the media might be a cause of crime and of the fear of crime • Look at the role the media play in creating moral panics
  • 3. Starter • How does the media represent Crime and Deviance? • Can they be accused of sensationalisation? • Do they cause a moral panic? • What folk devils have been created from Media Coverage?
  • 4. Facts • Richard Ericson et al’s (1991) study of Toronto found that 45-71% of the press and radio news was about deviance and its control • Williams & Dickinson (1993)- British newspapers devote up to 30% of their news space to crime • While the news media show an interest in crime, they give a distorted image of crime, criminals and policing (compared to OS)
  • 5. Key Words • Age Fallacy- media representations give impression that all age groups are involved in crime • Dramatic Fallacy- the media focus on violent crimes therefore creating fear of crime esp among elderly and women by over focusing on crimes against these groups • Ingenuity Fallacy- Media give impression that criminals are clever, yet most crime is opportunistic • Class Fallacy- Media give impression that M/C are more likely to be victims of crime • Police Fallacy- Media give impression that the police are more efficient than they really are
  • 6. News Values and Crime Coverage • The distorted picture of crime painted by the news media reflects the fact that news is a social construction. • Cohen & Young- news is not discovered but manufactured (some stories selected, while others are rejected) • News value- criteria by which journalists and editors decide whether a story is newsworthy
  • 7. • Key News Values influencing the selection of crime stories include: 1. Immediacy 2.Dramatisation- action & excitement 3.Personalisation- human interest stories about individuals e.g. Violent & sexual crimes 4.Higher Status persons- e.g. celebrities 5.Simplification- eliminating shades of grey 6.Novelty or unexpectedness- new angle 7.Risk- victim centred stories 8.Violence- visible and spectacular acts
  • 8. Activity • Using the same newspapers as earlier find some crime stories in the national and local press. Which news values do the stories reflect?
  • 9. Fictional Representations of Crime • Fictional representations of crime form TV, cinema and novels are important sources of our knowledge of crime (a lot of their output is crime related) • Mandel (1984)- from 1945- 1984 over 10 billion crime thrillers were sold worldwide, 25% of prime time TV and 20% of films are crime shows or movies (what examples are there?)
  • 10. • Fictional representations follow Surette’s ‘law of opposites’ (opp to OS, and similar to news coverage). • Property crime is under represented, while violence, drugs and sex crimes are over represented • Fictional sex crimes are committed by psychopaths, not acquaintances • Fictional cops usually catch the bad guy
  • 11. • However three recent trends are worth noting: 1. Reality shows tend to feature young, non white ‘underclass’ offenders 2.There is an increasing tendency to show police as corrupt, brutal and less successful 3.Victims have become more central, with police portrayed as avengers and audiences invited to identify with their suffering
  • 12. The Media as a cause of Crime • Concern that media has –ve effect on attitudes, values and behaviour (esp. on young, lower class and uneducated) • Blame for decline in behaviour shifted from cinema-horror comics-video nasties-rap lyrics and now computer games
  • 13. Ways in which the media may cause C&D • Imitation- providing deviant role models, resulting in copycat behaviour (Bandura) • Arousal- through viewing violent imagery • Desensitisation- repeatedly viewing violence • Transmitting knowledge of criminal techniques • Target of crime e.g. Theft of plasma TV’s • Stimulating desires for unaffordable goods- through advertising • Glamourising offending
  • 14. AO2 • Most studies have found that exposure to media violence has at most a small and limited –ve effect on audiences • Sociologists note that this link is simplistic because it fails to recognise that audiences differ in terms of age, social class, IQ and level of education and so do not react in the same way to media content
  • 15. AO2 • Fails to appreciate nature of violence caused by a range of factors e.g. Poor socialisation, bad parenting, peer group influences, mental illness, drugs and alcohol • Most research uses lab experiments (allows control of variables however artificiality undermines validity), also cannot measure LT effects
  • 16. Fear of Crime • The media exaggerate the amount of violent crime and the risks of certain groups becoming victims e.g. Young women and elderly • Research to an extent supports the view that media cause fear of crime • Schlesinger & Tumbler (1992)- tabloid readers and heavy users of TV expressed greater fear of going out at night and of becoming victims
  • 17. Media, Relative Deprivation and Crime • Left Realists argue that the mass media help to increase the sense of relative deprivation (feelings of deprivation relative to others) among poor and marginalised social groups • In today’s society even the poorest have media access, the media present people with images of a materialistic ‘good life’ as a goal to which they should strive • Stimulating the sense of relative deprivation and social exclusion felt by marginalised groups who cannot afford the goods
  • 18. • As Merton suggests pressure to conform to the norm can cause deviant behaviour when the opportunity to achieve by legitimate means is blocked. • The media is instrumental in setting the norm and therefore promoting crime.
  • 19. Stan Cohen • Moral Panic: An exaggerated over reaction by society to a perceived problem- driven/inspired by Media • Media plays a crucial role in the social construction of C&D • Distorting and exaggeration by the media create a public reaction. This leads to the public labelling certain groups (sfp). • Moral entrepreneurs: editors, police officers, politicians, legal profession. • The media interest and exaggerated reporting leads to a social reaction and amplification (a deviancy amplification spiral), as more interest in fact leads to the identification of more of the offending behaviour. • Selective reporting actually creates the crime problem.
  • 21. Mods and Rockers (pg 122) • Who were the Mods & Rockers? • What happened in Clacton during the Easter Weekend? • The media over-reaction to the events involved 3 elements, what were they? • How was the turn of events linked to the idea of deviance amplification spiral? • How did the Media’s definition of the situation create a Moral Panic? • How does Cohen link moral panics to a ‘boundary crisis’? • What criticism of moral panics are there?
  • 22. Perspectives of Moral Panics • Functionalism- see moral panics as ways of responding to the sense of anomie (normlessness) created by change. By dramatising the threat to society in the form of a folk devil, the media raise the collective consciousness and reassert social controls when central values are threatened. • Neo-Marxism- Hall et al argue that the moral panic over ‘mugging’ served to distract attention from the crisis of capitalism (dividing W/C on racial grounds)
  • 23. H/W • Thomas and Loader (2000)- cyber crime is computer mediated activities that are either illegal or considered illicit, and are conducted through global electronic networks 1. Read through Global cyber crime and summarise 2. Mind map Crime and Media topic
  • 24. Essay Practice • Examine some of the ways in which deviance may be related to the mass media (21m)
  • 25. The media and crime News as socially constructed Fictional crime  The media over-represent ‘The news is not discovered but Our ideas of crime violence and sex crimes – manufactured’ says Cohen and don’t just come from this make us think its Young. What they mean is what the news. Fictional happening more and that gets coverage depends on what representation of most killers are strange has happened, who is involved, crime comes from psychopaths – in most when and where. Crime by its books, films and TV cases the perpetrator is very definition is abnormal and shows. They tend to know to the victim. ticks most of these news worthy match the incorrect boxes. stereotypes of the  The media portray media. criminals and victims as Mass media and older and more middle- crime class. Can the media cause How could the media  Media coverage cause crime? exaggerates police success crime or fear? in clearing up cases. Most studies show media  Imitation – copycats.  The media exaggerates the violence has at most a small  Desensitisation. risk of victimisation, and limited negative effect on audiences. Studies do  Learning criminal especially women. techniques. show those that watch TV  The media overplay for longer periods of time  Desire for extraordinary crimes but are more likely to be fearful unaffordable goods. underplay ordinary crimes. of becoming a victim.  Glamorising offending.
  • 26. New media – new crime Cyber-crime Cinema, television, computer games and the  Cyber-trespass – includes hacking and internet have all been blamed for spreading viruses. corrupting the young. The internet has grown so quickly its brought about cyber  Cyber –deception and theft – identify crime. Defined as computer-meditated theft, illegal downloading. criminal activities conducted through global  Cyber-pornography – illegal porn involving electronic networks. children.  Cyber-violence – bullying by text, threatening e-mails, cyber stalking. Stanley Cohen Mass media and crime Cohen studied how the media has often demonised youth culture. This Deviancy amplification spiral happened to mods and Rockers in 1964 who were This idea says that sensationalist seen as modern day folk reporting by the newspapers distorts the devils who threatened act of crime or deviance and increases social order. His research public awareness. Public pressure is put found that actual acts of on the police and courts to act. This deviant acts were minimal. creates a moral panic where certain acts or groups are seen as a threat to social order.

Editor's Notes

  1. However, think about ‘cops with cameras’, police camera action’ etc – these represent young, non-white ‘underclass offenders. Also the police are increasingly shown as corrupt and brutal. Victims have also become more central, with law enforcers portrayed as their avengers and audiences invited to identify with their suffering.
  2. " Video nasty " was a colloquial term coined in the United Kingdom by 1982 [1] which originally applied to a number of films distributed on video cassette that were criticized for their violent content by the press, commentators such as Mary Whitehouse and various religious organizations.
  3. Bandura ’s laboratory experiments, sought to establish a link between viewing violent images and violent behaviour.
  4. Reporting of crime served ideological purpose of turning white WC against black W/C. Divide and rule strategy diverted attention from mismanagement of Capitalism
  5. Thomas and Loader (2000) defined cyber crime as computer mediated activities that are either illegal or considered illicit, and are conducted through global electronic networks Jewkes (2003)- the internet creates opportunities to commit both conventional crimes e.g. Fraud and ‘new crimes using new tools’ e.g. Software piracy. Wall (2001): 4 Categories Cyber-trespass- hacking, spreading viruses Cyber-deception- identity theft, phishing (getting identity or bank details by deception), illegal downloading Cyber-pornography Cyber-violence - (doing psychological harm or inciting physical harm) text bullying, cyber stalking, hate crimes against minority groups Policing cyber crime is difficult because of the scale of the internet and because its globalised nature poses problems for Jurisdiction. Police culture also gives cyber crime low priority (lacks excitement of conventional policing) ICT provides the police and state with greater opportunities for surveillance and control of the population e.g. CCTV, electronic databases, digital fingerprinting, identity cards