3. Media and Crime
3.6 References
Dr. Chantal Faucher
Altheide, D. L. (1997). The news media, the problem frame, and the production of fear. The Sociological Quarterly, 38(4), 647-668.
Anderson, M. C., & Robertson, C. L. (2011). Seeing red: A history of natives in Canadian newspapers. Winnipeg, MN: University of Manitoba Press.
Baker, R. G., & Verrelli, N. (2017). “Smudging, drumming and the like do not a nation make”: Temporal liminality and delegitimization of Indigenous protest in Canada. Journal of Canadian Studies, 51(1), 37-63.
Barak, G. (1996). Mass-mediated regimes of truth: Race, gender, and class in crime news thematics. In M. D. Schwartz & D. Milovanovic (Eds.), Race, gender, and class in criminology: The intersection (pp. 105-123). New York: Garland.
Becker, H. S. (1963). Outsiders: Studies in the sociology of deviance. New York: The Free Press.
Becker, H. S. (1967). Whose side are we on? Social Problems, 14(3), 239-247.
Beckermann, K. M. (2020). Newspapers as a form of settler colonialism: An examination of the Dakota Access pipeline protest and American Indian representation in Indigenous, state, and national news [Unpublished doctoral dissertation]. North Dakota State University.
Bouchard, J., Wong, J. S., & Gushue, K. (2020). The differential portrayal of ‘sympathetic’ homicide victims in the media. International Review of Victimology, 26(3), 314-331.
Buckler, K. (2015). Media, crime, and crime waves. In J. D. Wright (Ed.), International encyclopedia of the social & behavioral sciences (2nd ed., pp. 23-28). Amsterdam: Elsevier.
Calder, M. J., Richter, S., Burns, K. K., & Mao, Y. (2011). Framing homelessness for the Canadian public: The news media and homelessness. Canadian Journal of Urban Research, 20(2), 1-19.
Capurro, G., Jardine, C. G., Tustin, J., & Driedger, M. (2022). Moral panic about “covidiots” in Canadian newspaper coverage of COVID-19. PLoS ONE, 17(1), e0261942. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0261942
Carter, M. J. (2013). The hermeneutics of frames and framing: An examination of the media’s construction of reality. SAGE Open, 3, 1-12.
Carver, A., & Harrie, C. (2017). Framing terrorists in Canada: A comparative analysis of two shootings. International Journal of Criminal Justice Sciences, 12(1), 98-110.
Chama, B. (2019). The Black Lives Matter movement, crime and police brutality: Comparative study of New York Post and New York Daily News. European Journal of American Culture, 38(3), 201-216.
Chan, W., & Mirchandani, K. (Eds.) (2002). Crimes of colour: Racialization and the criminal justice system in Canada. Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press.
Chibnall, S. (1977). Law-and-order news: An analysis of crime reporting in the British Press. London: Tavistock Publications.
Christie, N. (1986). The ideal victim. In E. Fattah (Ed.), From crime policy to victim policy (pp. 17-30). Macmillan.
Clark, B. (2014). Framing Canada’s Aboriginal Peoples: A comparative analysis of Indigenous and mainstream television news. The Canadian Journal of Native Studies, 34(2), 41-64.
Cohen, S. (1972). Folk devils and moral panics: The creations of the Mods and Rockers. Oxford, UK: Basil Blackwell.
Conlin, L., & Davie, W. (2015). Missing White Woman Syndrome: How media framing affects viewers’ emotions. Electronic News, 9(1), 36-50.
Coogan, D. (2012). Race and crime in sports media: Content analysis on the Michael Vick and Ben Roethlisberger cases. Journal of Sports Media, 7(2), 129-151.
Corrigall-Brown, C., & Wilkes, R. (2012). Picturing protest: The visual framing of collective action by First Nations in Canada. American Behavioral Scientist, 56(2), 223-243.
Cripps, K. (2021). Media constructions of Indigenous women in sexual assault cases: Reflections from Australia and Canada. Current Issues in Criminal Justice, 33(3), 300-321.
Crosby, A. M. (2021). News media representation of the Dakota Access Pipeline protest (A study using systemic functional linguistics) [Unpublished doctoral dissertation]. Kent State University.
Entman, R. (1993). Framing: Toward clarification of a fractured paradigm. Journal of Communication, 10, 155-173.
Ericson, R. V. (1991). Mass media, crime, law, and justice. British Journal of Criminology, 31(3), 219-249.
Ericson, R. V., Baranek, P. M., & Chan, J. B. L. (1991). Representing order: Crime, law, and justice in the news media. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
Fairbairn, J., & Dawson, M. (2013). Canadian news coverage of intimate partner homicide: Analyzing changes over time. Feminist Criminology, 8(3), 147-176.
Faucher, C. (2007). Bad boys and girls, yesterday and today: A century of print media perspectives on youthful offending [Unpublished doctoral dissertation]. Simon Fraser University.
Faucher, C. (2008). Fear and loathing in the news: A qualitative analysis of Canadian print news coverage of youthful offending in the twentieth century. Journal of Youth Studies, 12(4), 439-456.
Fleras, A., & Kunz, J. L. (2001). Media and minorities: Representing diversity in a multicultural Canada. Toronto: Thompson.
Fleras, A. (2011). The media gaze: Representations of diversity in Canada. UBC Press.
Freng, A. (2007). American Indians in the news: A media portrayal in crime articles. American Indian Culture & Research Journal, 31(1), 21-37.
Gilbert, J. (1986). A cycle of outrage: America’s reaction to the juvenile delinquent in the 1950s. New York: St. Martin’s Press.
Gilchrist, K. (2010). “Newsworthy” victims?: Exploring differences in Canadian local press coverage of missing/murdered Aboriginal and White women. Feminist Media Studies, 10(4), 373-390.
Goldsmith, A. J. (2010). Policing’s new visibility. The British Journal of Criminology, 50(5), 914-934.
Goode, E., & Ben-Yehuda, N. (1994). Moral panics: Culture, politics, and social construction. Annual Review of Sociology, 20, 149-171.
Gover, A. R., Harper, S. B., & Langton, L. (2020). Anti-Asian hate crime during the COVID-19 pandemic: Exploring the reproduction of inequality. American Journal of Criminal Justice, 45(4), 647-667.
Grant, P. R., & Smith, H. J. (2021). Activism in the time of COVID-19. Group Processes & Intergroup Relations, 24(2), 297-205.
Gushue, K., Lee, C., Gravel, J., & Wong, J. S. (2018). Familiar gangsters: Gang violence, brotherhood, and the media’s fascination with a crime family. Crime & Delinquency, 64, 1612-1635.
Hackett, R. A., & Gruneau, R. (2000). The missing news: Filters and blind spots in Canada’s press. Ottawa, ON: Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.
Hall, S., Critcher, C., Jefferson, T., Clarke, J., & Roberts, B. (1978). Policing the crisis: Mugging, the state and law and order. London: Macmillan.
Henry, F., & Tator, C. (2002). Discourses of domination: Racial bias in the Canadian English language press. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
Herman, E. S., & Chomsky, N. (1988). Manufacturing consent: The political economy of the mass media. New York: Pantheon Books.
Huey, L., & Broll, R. (2015). “I don’t find it sexy at all”: Criminal investigators’ views of media glamorization of police ‘dirty work.’ Policing and Society, 25(2), 236-247.
Hugill, D. (2010). Missing women, missing news: Covering crisis in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. Fernwood Publishing.
Intravia, J., & Pickett, J. T. (2019). Stereotyping online? Internet news, social media, and the racial typification of crime. Sociological Forum, 34(3), 616-642.
Intravia, J., Wolff, K. T., Paez, R., & Gibbs, B. R. (2017). Investigating the relationship between social media consumption and fear of crime: A partial analysis of mostly young adults. Computers in Human Behavior, 77, 158-168.
Jewkes, Y. (2015). Media and Crime (3rd ed.). London, UK: Sage Publications.
Jiwani, Y. (1993). By omission and commission: ‘Race’ and representation in Canadian television news [Unpublished doctoral thesis]. Simon Fraser University.
Jiwani, Y., & Young, M. L. (2006). Missing and Murdered Women: Reproducing marginality in news discourse. Canadian Journal of Communication, 31(4), 895-917.
Johnston, G. (2020). The kids are all White: Examining race and representation in news media coverage of opioid overdose deaths in Canada. Sociological Inquiry, 90(1), 123-146.
Killingbeck, D. (2001). The role of television news in the construction of school violence as a ‘moral panic.’ Journal of Criminal Justice and Popular Culture, 8(3), 186-202.
Kilty, J. M., & Frigon, S. (2016). The enigma of a violent woman: A critical examination of the case of Karla Homolka. Routledge.
Kohm, S. (this volume). Cultural criminology: Something old, something new, something borrowed, and something [black and] blue. This volume.
Lee, C., & Wong, J. S. (2019). 99 reasons and he ain’t one: A content analysis of domestic homicide news coverage. Violence Against Women, 26(2), 213-232.
Manning, P. (2001). News and news sources. London: Sage Publications.
McDiarmid, J. (2019). Highway of Tears: A true story of racism, indifference and the pursuit of justice for missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls. Doubleday Canada.
Monchalin, L., & Marques, O. (2014). “Canada under attack from within”: Problematizing “the Natives,” governing borders, and the social injustice of the Akwesasne dispute. American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 38(4), 57-84.
Morgan, G., & Poynting, S. (2012). Global Islamophobia: Muslims and moral panic in the West. Ashgate Publishing.
Moss, J. L. (2019). The forgotten victims of Missing White Woman Syndrome: An examination of legal measures that contribute to the lack of search and recovery of missing Black girls and women. William & Mary Journal of Race, Gender, & Social Justice, 25(3), 737-762.
Raynauld, V., Richez, E., & Morris, K. B. (2017). Canada is #IdleNoMore: Exploring dynamics of Indigenous political and civic protest in the Twitterverse. Information, Communication & Society, 21(4), 626-642.
Richez, E., Raynauld, V., Agi, A., & Kartolo, A. B. (2020). Unpacking the political effects of social movements with a strong digital component: The case of #IdleNoMore in Canada. Social Media + Society, 6(2), 1-13.
Schissel, B. (2006). Still blaming children: Youth conduct and the politics of child hating (2nd ed.). Halifax, NS: Fernwood Publishing.
Schneider, B. (2013). Reporting homelessness: Practice, product, profession. Journalism Practice, 7(1), 47-61.
Schneider, B. (2014). Homelessness: Emotion discourse and the reproduction of social inequality. Canadian Journal of Communication, 39(2), 235-248.
Schulenberg, J. L., & Chenier, A. (2014). International protest events and the hierarchy of credibility: Media frames defining the police and protestors as social problems. Canadian Journal of Criminology and Criminal Justice, 56(3), 261-294.
Silcox, J. (2022). Youth crime and depictions of youth crime in Canada: Are news depictions purely moral panic? Canadian Review of Sociology, 59, 96-114.
Sommers, Z. (2017). Missing White Woman Syndrome: An empirical analysis of race and gender disparities in online news coverage of missing persons. The Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology, 106(2), 275-314.
Stevenson, R., Kusz, J., Fabian, S., & Lyons, T. (this volume). Feminist criminology. This volume.
Stillman, S. (2007). The Missing White Girl Syndrome: Disappeared Women and Media Activism. Gender & Development 15(3), 491–502.
Surette, R. (2015). Media, crime, and criminal justice: Images, realities, and policies (5th ed.). Stamford, CT: Cengage.
Truong, S. V. (2012). ‘Please do not feed the homeless:’ The role of stereotyping and media framing on the criminalization of homelessness. (Publication 3551079) [PhD dissertation, University of California Santa Cruz], ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global.
Walker, C., Alexander, A., Doucette, M. B., Lewis, D., Neufeld, H. T., Martin, D., Masuda, J., Stefanelli, R., & Castleden, H. (2019). Are the pens working for justice? News media coverage of renewable energy involving Indigenous Peoples in Canada. Energy Research & Social Science, 57, e101230.
Webster, F., Rice, K., & Sud, A. (2020). A critical content analysis of media reporting on opioids: The social construction of an epidemic. Social Science & Medicine, 244, e3112642.
Wong, J. S., & Harraway, V. (2020). Media presentation of homicide: Examining characteristics of sensationalism and fear of victimization and their relation to newspaper article prominence. Homicide Studies, 24(4), 333-352.
Wong, J. S., & Lee, C. (2018). Extra! Extra! The importance of victim-offender relationship in homicide newsworthiness. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 36(9-10), 4186-4206.
Wortley S. (2002). The depiction of race and crime in the Toronto print media. In B. Schissel & C. Brooks (Eds.), Marginality and condemnation: An introduction to critical criminology (pp. 55-82). Fernwood Publishing.