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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page paper relates the fact that public images can influence views on crime. The mass media has served as a basis for our cultural understanding and response to news events, and it is not surprising that theorists like Kathleen Daly have related the belief that the mass media has a substantial influence on the public's understanding of policies on crime. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHAusCri.rtf
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problems, and assessments of particular issues. The mass media has served as a basis for our cultural understanding and response to news events, and it is not surprising that
theorists like Kathleen Daly (1995) have related the belief that the mass media has a substantial influence on the publics understanding of policies on crime. Janet Chan, though, in
response to Kathleen Dalys arguments, suggests that there is an overemphasis on the impact of the mass media on perceptions of crime. In order to assess this issue, it
is necessary to consider the arguments of both of these theorists. Kathleen Dalys arguments are clear: while criminologists are noted for their ability to create and argue
for certain policies on crime, they are rarely the most influential factor relating to policy change. In countries like Australia, where the mass media and television viewing has defined
a large cultural influence, the progression of news programming and the sensationalism of news broadcasting has influenced public policies. Daly (1995) constructs a distinct view on celebrated criminal cases
and the way in which these cases have influenced public views and public policy-making. In understanding Dalys perspective, there are a few elements that must be considered relative to her
argument and the response by Janet Chan. First, a number of different social theories have been applied to an understand of crime and criminal behaviors, including assessments of the
underlying reasons for deviant behaviors and proposals for social control. Commonly, the concept of criminality is related through views of classical social theory and the cyclical nature of criminal
behaviors. In his work Stigma: Notes on the Management of Soiled Identity, Goffman argued that some individuals, demonstrate a propensity for addressing self-identification and the embracing of negative
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