2nd ed.Explores how three Canadian newspapers address appropriate reactions to youth crime during the 1990s. While recent scholarship has emphasized the ways in which moral panics have become more complexly represented within mass media, the author pays attention to how such representational tactics are played out, drawing particular attention to emotional reactions to youth crime. Comparing and contrasting regional and national, as well as tabloid versus broadsheet newspapers, the author draws attention to “emotions contests,” which are closely related to victim contests over young offender culpability and identity. Emotions contests occur where emotional reactions to social problems become, themselves, the source of contention. News refle...
Crime reporting, in one form or another, is as old as crime itself. Almost all young reporters have ...
‘Road rage’ is a term that became frequently used in the media in the 1990s. While it referred to a ...
This paper assesses the “moral panic” framework of Stanley Cohen with reference to panhandling and s...
The author explores how three Canadian newspapers address appropriate reactions to youth crime durin...
Regular Session - CSA084 –Youth and SocietyCompeting emotional ideologies within three Canadian news...
This research explores the relationship between media and participant discourse in the construction ...
In order to assess the relevance of claims often found in contemporary print media accounts that you...
This study examines the problem of the moral panic over youth violence focusing on how these phenome...
The news media play a significant role in shaping public narratives about homicide by the particular...
It has been well established that fear of crime is, at least in part, influenced by the media. Past ...
Over the last few years, there has been an abundance of media articles published on irregular migran...
This social constructionist program of inquiry begins to explore how psychopathy/the psychopath is c...
This research explores different representations of youth crime in Canada from a feminist criminolog...
In this article I examine Canadian youth crime debates as a way to explore the connection between "v...
This paper describes the impact of extensive journalistic coverage on a small community in Quebec th...
Crime reporting, in one form or another, is as old as crime itself. Almost all young reporters have ...
‘Road rage’ is a term that became frequently used in the media in the 1990s. While it referred to a ...
This paper assesses the “moral panic” framework of Stanley Cohen with reference to panhandling and s...
The author explores how three Canadian newspapers address appropriate reactions to youth crime durin...
Regular Session - CSA084 –Youth and SocietyCompeting emotional ideologies within three Canadian news...
This research explores the relationship between media and participant discourse in the construction ...
In order to assess the relevance of claims often found in contemporary print media accounts that you...
This study examines the problem of the moral panic over youth violence focusing on how these phenome...
The news media play a significant role in shaping public narratives about homicide by the particular...
It has been well established that fear of crime is, at least in part, influenced by the media. Past ...
Over the last few years, there has been an abundance of media articles published on irregular migran...
This social constructionist program of inquiry begins to explore how psychopathy/the psychopath is c...
This research explores different representations of youth crime in Canada from a feminist criminolog...
In this article I examine Canadian youth crime debates as a way to explore the connection between "v...
This paper describes the impact of extensive journalistic coverage on a small community in Quebec th...
Crime reporting, in one form or another, is as old as crime itself. Almost all young reporters have ...
‘Road rage’ is a term that became frequently used in the media in the 1990s. While it referred to a ...
This paper assesses the “moral panic” framework of Stanley Cohen with reference to panhandling and s...