Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

Using material from Item A and elsewhere, assess sociological explanations of the role of the mass media in creating moral panics about crime and deviance (21 marks).

Good Essays
1035 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Using material from Item A and elsewhere, assess sociological explanations of the role of the mass media in creating moral panics about crime and deviance (21 marks).
Item A:
"The news media are one of our main sources of knowledge about crime and deviance. Often the media will create a moral panic surrounding crimes and criminals or deviants.
Moral panics can lead to a range of responses by the public, by agents of social control and by the criminals or deviants themselves. Over-representation of certain types of crimes may lead to heightened fear of these crimes by the public. In some cases, moral panics may also result in a change in the law."

01. Using material from Item A and elsewhere, assess sociological explanations of the role of the mass media in creating moral panics about crime and deviance (21 marks).

The Media are often the subject of claims that they cause crime and deviance through their devotion to exaggerating the truth in order to have a “newsworthy” story. Often it is the case that the media will play an important role in what Durkheim would say is maintaining the boundaries of society, reaffirming what is socially acceptable, and what is not. Durkheim would also say that all change starts with deviance, and the media highlighting this deviance on the world stage helps to excite and increase the rate of social change, which as suggested in the item, can lead to changes in law. Examples of this have been seen with public displays of homosexuality in countries where homosexual marriage is illegal, or disallowed. This kind of deviance is picked up by the media, and projected on a world stage in the name of news, and appeals to the world’s sense of equality and liberalism. So, while Functionalists would say the news plays an important function in society as a tool to catalyst social change, others would argue that it actually victimises a lot of people.
This is seen with Cohen’s work on Folk Devils and Moral panics, in which a person with new norms, values or morals- or even all three, comes along and challenges societies accepted ones. This kind of challenge is met harshly and the new group, or person, is outcasted. They’re cut off from society as a folk devil and victimised for being different. This was seen in the study of the Drug Takers by Jock Young. The Hippies he undertook a participant observation with were using drugs as a peripheral activity, in which nobody was being hurt and nobody was using them too often. The media picked up this criminal and deviant activity, and called for a tough crackdown. The authorities and agents of social control, as mentioned in the item, such as the Police for example, then respond by targeting the group, leading to more arrests, and the label of “junkies” and “druggies” being applied to the group. Over time, the once peripheral activity has morphed into being a centralised underground activity which the group subscribe to as part of their self fulfilling prophecy, or as Lemert would say, they subscribe to secondary deviance. In this example, the peripheral drug taking was a primary act of deviance, and the acceptance of the label and underground centralisation of drug taking has become the secondary, societal reaction to the act of deviance.
In this way, the media has had a negative impact on crime and deviance by increasing the frequency of the acts of deviance, and raising the official statistics of drug related arrests due to police targeting, among other agencies of social control. But that’s only part of the story.
The media have contributed in an even more detrimental way in the past. Particularly in the case of the Mods and Rockers at Clacton. In this case, acts of violence between two groups were reported on by the media, and the police were called upon to crack down on the deviance and misbehaviour. They went as far as to predict the next time that the event of mass-deviance/criminality between the two groups would take place, and thus invited unknowingly, more participants to the violence. The following event, as with the prediction, was far worse, far bigger, and better covered. Thus, the effect was seen that the problem was bigger than first thought and that the behaviour of the mods and the rockers was categorised and reported on in such a way that others, who were fence-sitters, or indifferent to the typification were asked, or sometimes forced, to subscribe to one of the two groups. Both groups were then stigmatised by society and outcast, and frustration repeatedly came out as violence thereafter. Once again, the media has caused a moral panic, and in this case deviance amplification spiral.
The main criticisms of these arguments however are as follows,
Durkheim is criticised for being naïve to crime of the wider power structure by Marxists, in that he ignores who decides what is criminal and not. Neo Marxists would go as far as to say that some crimes however, are aimed at political/social change too, and would agree with Durkheim in that sense. Durkheim is also criticised for saying that a certain amount of crime in society is inevitable and useful, or functional, because it performs that boundary maintenance which the media help to propagate, however he does not say how much is enough, and there’s no set point where it ends. Cohen’s amplification spiral is criticised on that very point too, in that the amplification spiral by his description should carry on forever, and not be stopped, yet in reality news stories die down due to one of the characteristics of the news being immediacy, or how recent something is.
It is my opinion, that the media are a cause of moral panics as the evidence seems overwhelming. There have been cases where the media has had a positive effect, that’s true, but in my opinion it’s a generally negative effect they display. They seems to thrive off demonizing and victimising deviants, which perhaps some realists, particularly right realists would agree with. However, I believe labelling has a much larger effect on societal crime and deviance than first estimated, and as such my conclusion is that the media plays an important role in creating moral panics about crime and deviance.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Crime causes many effects on communities and individual`s one major influence is the media. The media can often manipulate individual’s views and can cause effects onto the community. Some aspects of the media can make people judge other people which can cause problems onto the community, by people talking about particular people, for example a certain skin color.…

    • 1095 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The public has always used the Mass Media as the primary source of information about most topics especially crime. The Mass Media has the power to convey messages and ideas to a large audience but how truthful or factual these messages are has long been a debate of sociologist, due to news broadcast being so criminogenic for example, Ericson et al (1987). “Study of news-making in Toronto found that a remarkably high proportion of news was about deviance and control. Ranging from 45.3% in newspaper to 71.5% on radio stations. ( Maguire,Morgan and Reiner 2012, p.248) Therefore this use of Media may create fear amongst the public which in turn causes “Moral panic” and “Folk Devils”. Therefore I will outline and Illustrate the term “Moral Panic” and the effect it has on the public, also aiming to show the role the Media plays in creating panic.…

    • 535 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The abduction and subsequent murder of the toddler James Bulger, from a shopping centre in Liverpool, was a crime which brought about a huge moral panic in Britain in the 1990’s. A murder of any sort brings about a moral panic, but when the victim, and in this case the defendants, are both children, it attracts overwhelming media attention and a vast moral panic is quickly spread. It has been previously said that it is the most monstrous of crime when a child elects to kill another child. Theories of moral panics are sparked when they are spread; the ‘Grassroots Model’ (Critcher, 2008) theory occurs when the public and media collaborate, consequently leading to fears becoming exaggerated; in the case of James Bulger; ephebiphobia, which is the fear of children and youth. The murder of Bulger made parents realise how defenceless their own…

    • 1213 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the book, Folk Devils and Moral Panics, Stanley Cohen wrote that moral panics usually include what he called a deviancy amplification spiral. In folk devils and moral panics, certain groups periodically become the focus of moral panics. They are labelled as being outside the central core values of our consensual society and as posing a particular threat to them. The groups investigated by Cohen were the Mods and Rockers. The 'central core values ' which such groups transgress against are argued to be the norms and values which serve the interests of the dominant classes. The media whips up a moral panic which is coupled with calls for strengthening the forces of law and order.…

    • 631 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Examples Of Moral Panic

    • 194 Words
    • 1 Page

    Moral panic is basically the concept that if people behave a certain way, they are acting deviant and are considered threats to society and societal values. This type of panic becomes largely widespread and exaggerated through various forms of media, like newspapers, thus creating fear among large groups of people. This concept is important because it defines what is considered as unacceptable behaviour in society. Moral panic also paves the way for more policing, higher sentences and new laws. In some cases these laws are found to go against human rights, however, this is justified as a necessary evil, which must be done to help stop the sudden crisis and outbreak of crime. One famous example of moral panic is the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina;…

    • 194 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Piran Talkington, 16188071 ANT152 Final Paper ‘The media's the most powerful entity on earth. They have the power to make the innocent guilty and to make the guilty innocent, and that's power. Because they control the minds of the masses.’ (Malcolm X). Media shapes the way we see everything in life.…

    • 1887 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Yvonne Jewkes talks about strengths and weaknesses in her book ‘media and crime’ one of the strengths she looks at is ‘The power of the media in defining what counts as normal and deviant behaviour, and the effects of such media labelling on particular social groups.’ (Jewkes, 2011, p.1) This…

    • 1224 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Assess sociological explanations of the role of the mass media in creating moral panics about crime and deviance (21 marks)…

    • 953 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Cohen argues that through the portrayal of such folk devils, the media can create a moral panic in society at large. By making folk devils a focus for wider anxieties, the media increase or amplify those anxieties, shaping a mood of public fear and outrage. This fear and outrage then produces demands that ‘something must be done’ (to restore order and punish the disorderly).…

    • 991 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Theories Of Moral Panic

    • 1557 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Jock Young focuses more on the media hype and the way culture shifts are defined by the media and critics as a cycle. The increasing number of reports surrounding antisocial behaviour and other culture changes that are perceived adverse leads to a moral panic. The term deviancy amplification was coined by Leslie Wilkins to explain this phenomenon (Wilkins, L. 1964). The initial problem stems from structural and cultural changes; the amplification that follows is when dramatic media reporting of deviant behaviours inadvertently intensifies panics creating social problems by presenting the social structure and culture changes theatrically and abruptly. The intense media coverage can very quickly contrive a so called ‘moral panic’ about a certain threat to societal values.…

    • 1557 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The aim of this essay is to compare, contrast and evaluate two sociological theories of crime causation and two psychological theories of crime causation.…

    • 1985 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    To comprehend this statement and to form either a refuting or supporting conclusion, several elements need to be considered. Firstly, in order to understand the idea that criminal justice policy is degenerating into a ‘crude populism’, the term ‘populism’ needs to be defined. Secondly, an evaluation has to be made on the effect media has on society. This involves the discussion of how ‘moral panics’ are implemented and used to create fear in society that ultimately leads to a punitive populism. To assess the role political institutions…

    • 2328 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Better Essays

    Moral Panic

    • 1627 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Therefore, frustration on society’s failed norms and values can be compensated by deviant behavior, which provides a sense of respect and new values (Cohen, 1955). As with crime, these events are media driven (Hunt, 1997). Mass media or interest-groups are mostly in charge of the diffusion of moral panic events (Cohen, 2002). Cohen (2002) believed that media presented moral panics in a fashionable and stylized manner, which was managed by government, politicians and editors. In fact, research has shown that the words and the examples that media reports use to describe a deviance can influence the perception of the general public on that event (Young, 2008). Moreover, the use of sensationalism and selective reporting can lead to exaggeration and misinterpretation of the actual event (Brown, 1996). This essay will analyze the role of media in the generation of moral panic in young, working class, violent males by examining…

    • 1627 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Media and Moral Panic

    • 595 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Media is the main revenue of mass communication. The media plays a variety of roles in society; its main responsibility is that of providing information. As constant consumers and users of this information the relevance to the majority of members in the wider community inclusive of teachers and students is critical. The media positions us as the audience to take a particular viewpoint of a topic, issue or problem that is evident in our society. To what extent though does this role as information provider influence moral panic? Moral panic refers to the exaggerated social response to media coverage of a sporadic episode that consequently turns it into a widespread issue and causes colossal concern in society (Cohen, 1987). The media has a tendency to manipulate people by amplifying the facts and truths and using multiple camera techniques to surround a group/individual and outcast them in society, thus labeling them the ‘other’.…

    • 595 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The Hiv/Aids Moral Panic.

    • 1651 Words
    • 7 Pages

    The phrase ‘moral panic’ was first described by the English sociologist Stanley Cohen when he investigated the Mods and the Rockers in the 1960’s and the reaction of society toward a perceived threat of violence. His explanation of a moral panic is ‘a condition, episode, person or group of persons who become defined as a threat to societal values and interests’. (Cohen, 1987:9) Cohen also asserts the influence of the media and how they portray an event by exaggerating or manipulating facts to cause mass hysteria for their own agenda and how this is a major factor in the formation of moral panics. This perceived threat to a given societies values causes fear, anxiety and hostility towards the perpetrators of the offences against society. A moral crusade to ‘have something done’ about the threat ensues and a scapegoat or ‘folk devil’ must be established to offload blame. The concept of the ‘folk devil’ was coined by Stanley Cohen to describe the deviant or enemy who’s behaviour has caused threat to the values of society. Howard Becker refers to these folk devils as ‘outsiders’ who have been labelled as deviant by those…

    • 1651 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays

Related Topics