This project examines the social problem of wrongful conviction as it is represented online and in the news. Wrongful conviction discourse is a rhetorical arena in which activists, officials, vested interests, and social institutions interact. Data include 260 news stories about wrongful conviction, and the websites of four wrongful conviction activist groups. Chapter Three depicts the natural history of wrongful conviction in the news, noting three functions served by key news events: they ratify wrongful conviction as a legitimate problem, refocus this and other discourses, and reconcile the state with the individuals it has wrongly convicted. Chapter Four details “contextual bricolage,” the process by which wrongful conviction activists ...
The rebirth of shame sanctions in cyberspace brings a new set of questions concerning the practice. ...
This study examines how the #MeToo-movement was influenced by different forms of informal justice on...
In Examining Wrongful Convictions: Stepping Back, Moving Forward, the premise is that much can be le...
Countless incidences occur throughout the world each and every day. However, only a few of these occ...
There has been an explosion of legal scholarship on wrongful convictions in the last decade, reflect...
This Article explores the narrative that the scholarly literature on wrongful convictions uses to ta...
Researchers identify possible structural causes for wrongful convictions: racism, justice system cul...
As the number of wrongful conviction media productions increases, an understanding of their impact o...
This paper examines the role of media in publicising the names of people who receive a non-convictio...
The role of the media in exposing miscarriages of justice has not been extensively researched and ev...
This paper examines the role of media in publicising the names of people who receive a non-convictio...
Wrongful conviction is a pressing legal and social justice issue that requires scholarly attention i...
The chapter discusses practices and processes of self- and other identification in the pro-innocent ...
Although there is evidence of its occurrence in most criminal justice systems, wrongful conviction r...
This chapter demonstrates the agenda-setting power of citizen journalism in a context of miscarriage...
The rebirth of shame sanctions in cyberspace brings a new set of questions concerning the practice. ...
This study examines how the #MeToo-movement was influenced by different forms of informal justice on...
In Examining Wrongful Convictions: Stepping Back, Moving Forward, the premise is that much can be le...
Countless incidences occur throughout the world each and every day. However, only a few of these occ...
There has been an explosion of legal scholarship on wrongful convictions in the last decade, reflect...
This Article explores the narrative that the scholarly literature on wrongful convictions uses to ta...
Researchers identify possible structural causes for wrongful convictions: racism, justice system cul...
As the number of wrongful conviction media productions increases, an understanding of their impact o...
This paper examines the role of media in publicising the names of people who receive a non-convictio...
The role of the media in exposing miscarriages of justice has not been extensively researched and ev...
This paper examines the role of media in publicising the names of people who receive a non-convictio...
Wrongful conviction is a pressing legal and social justice issue that requires scholarly attention i...
The chapter discusses practices and processes of self- and other identification in the pro-innocent ...
Although there is evidence of its occurrence in most criminal justice systems, wrongful conviction r...
This chapter demonstrates the agenda-setting power of citizen journalism in a context of miscarriage...
The rebirth of shame sanctions in cyberspace brings a new set of questions concerning the practice. ...
This study examines how the #MeToo-movement was influenced by different forms of informal justice on...
In Examining Wrongful Convictions: Stepping Back, Moving Forward, the premise is that much can be le...