Crime and Media Reference Set
Just in: a three-volume set from the Sage Library of Criminology, Crime and Media, edited by Yvonne Jewkes (2009, Annenber Ref). Includes important and influential work from contemporary and classic literature traversing media studies and criminology.
Table of Contents:
VOLUME 1: THEORIZING CRIME AND MEDIA | |
Part 1: Media 'effects' | |
The Nature and Extent of the Panic | H. Cantril |
Transmission of Aggression through Imitation of Aggressive Models | A. Bandura, D. Ross and S. A. Ross |
Ten Things wrong with the "effects model" | D. Gauntlett |
The Inventory | S. Cohen |
Rethinking "Moral Panic" for Multi-Mediated Social Worlds | A. McRobbie and S. Thornton |
On the Concept of Moral Panic | D. Garland |
"Bringin' it all back home": Populism, media coverage and the dynamics of locality and globality in the politics of crime control | R. Sparks |
Part 2: Audiences, Punitiveness and Fear of Crime | |
The Function of Fiction for the Punitive Public | A. King and S. Maruna |
Red Tops, Populists and the Irresistible Rise of the Public Voice(s) | M. Ryan |
Ethnicity, Information Sources, and Fear of Crime | J. Lane and J.W. Meeker |
Public Sensibilities Towards Crime: Anxieties of affluence | E. Girling, I. Loader and R. Sparks |
Communicating the Terrorist Risk: Harnessing a culture of fear? | G. Mythen and S. Walklate |
How Media Has Changed Since "The Day That Changed Everything" | D. Schechter |
Part 3: Ownership and Control | |
Culture, Communications and Political Economy | P. Golding and G. Murdock |
Economic Conditions and Ideologies of Crime in the Media: A content analysis of crime news | M. Hickman Barlow, D.E. Barlow and T.G. Chiricos |
Media Control: The spectacular achievements of propaganda | N. Chomsky |
Watching what we Say: Global communication in a time of fear | T. Magder |
Market or Party Controls?: Chinese media in transition | B.H. Winfield and Z. Peng |
Guerrilla Tactics of Investigative Journalists in China | J. Tong |
Rise of New Media | J. Curran |
Penal Populism, the Media and Information Technology | J. Pratt |
VOLUME 2: MEDIA REPRESENTATIONS OF CRIME AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE | |
Part 1: Crime News | |
What Makes Crime News? | J. Katz |
The Construction of Crime News | Y. Jewkes |
Black Sheep and Rotten Apples: The press and police deviance | S. Chibnall |
Crime as a Signal, Crime as a Memory | M. Innes |
In re the Legal System | L.S. Chancer |
Doing Newsmaking Criminology from within the Academy | G. Barak |
Part 2 Victims and Offenders | |
Framing Homicide Narratives in Newspapers: Mediated witness and the construction of virtual victimhood | M. Peelo |
Offending Media: The social construction of offenders, victims and the probation service | Y. Jewkes |
The Rise and Rise of Imputed Filth | V. Alia and S. Bull |
Crimewatch UK: Keeping women off the streets | C.K. Weaver |
Reporting Violence in the British print Media: Gendered stories | B. Naylor |
From Invisible to Incorrigible: The demonization of marginalized women and girls | M. Chesney-Lind and M. Eliason |
Part 3: Media Representations of the Criminal Justice System | |
The Entertainment Media and the Social Construction of Crime and Justice | R. Surette |
Trial by Fire: Media constructions of corporate deviance | G. Cavender and A. Mulcahy |
Policing and the Media | R. Reiner |
British Justice: Not suitable for public viewing? | D. Stepniak |
Inside the American Prison Film | B. Jarvis |
Television, Public Space and Prison Population: A commentary on Mauer and Simon | T. Mathiesen |
VOLUME 3: EMERGING/NEW MEDIA AND CRIME | |
Part 1: Crime and the Surveillance Culture | |
Surveillance Studies: An Overview | D. Lyon |
Digital Rule: Punishment, control and technology | R. Jones |
The Surveillant Assemblage | K.D. Haggerty and R.V. Ericson |
What's New about the "new surveillance"? Classifying for Change and Continuity | G.T. Marx |
You'll never Walk Alone: CCTV surveillance, order and neo-liberal rule in Liverpool city centre | R. Coleman and J. Sim |
The Viewer Society: Michel Foucault's "Panopticon" revisited | T. Mathiesen |
Part 2: Crime, Deviance and the Internet | |
The Emerging Consensus on Criminal Conduct in Cyberspace | M. Goodman and S. Brenner |
Criminal Exploitation of Online Systems by Organised Crime Groups | K-K. R. Choo and R. Smith |
The problem of Stolen Identity and the Internet | E. Finch |
Approaching the Radical Other: The discursive culture of cyberhate | S. Zickmund |
The Nature of Child Pornography | E. Quayle and M. Taylor |
How Material are Cyberbodies? Broadband Internet and embodied subjectivity | L. Gies |
Part 3: Crime Control in a Global, Virtual and Mediatized World | |
Controlling Cyberspace? | K.F. Aas |
Cybercrimes and Cyberliberties: Surveillance, privacy and crime control | M. Yar |
Catching Cyber-criminals: Policing the Internet | D. Wall |
Why the Police don't Care about Cybercrime | M. Goodman |
The Problem of Child Pornography on the Internet: International responses | Y. Jewkes and C. Andrews |
Labels: crime, journalism
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