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Exam (elaborations)

The relationship between media and crime

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Extremely detailed essay plan on the pattern regarding media and crime. Includes introduction, conclusion, key theorists, explanations and evaluations. Earned an A* overall and above 90% in all class tests.

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Uploaded on
November 11, 2025
Number of pages
4
Written in
2025/2026
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Exam (elaborations)
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Media and Crime:
Intro:
 Media is argued to be a cause of crime, and it also
misrepresents/distorts criminality
 While the agents of socialisation provide the “carrot” by
encouraging certain actions, agents of control represent the “stick”
that brings people into line if they display deviant behaviour - media
is an agent
 Media outlets, such as newspapers and TV, devote large portions of
their content to coverage of crime - films, novels and videogames
have similar focus
 Pearson claims media has encouraged a “fear and fascination” with
crime, also acting as force of social control by wanting to avoid our
name in the media

Point 1: News Values
AO2:
 General criteria such as “negativity” which journalists use to
determine whether or not an event is newsworthy
 Existence of news values is why many sociologists view news as a
social construction
 Spencer Thomas defines news values as criteria that determines the
worth of a news story
 Brighton and Foy suggest news values are often “informal,
unconscious events.” Crime often meets these criteria which
explains why it gets so much media coverage
 Galtung and Rouge analysed international news across a group of
newspapers in Norway and identified news values like
“unambiguity,” and “personalisation”
 Violence outside a football game has greater news value than a
company who breaks health and safety laws, hence will get
published
 Greer also believes that media exaggerates the extent of violent
crime
 A number of articles have suggested that fallacies about crime
consist of: police efficiency fallacy, dramatic fallacy and ingenuity
fallacy
 Police efficiency fallacy: the cop usually gets his man. In reality,
most crime goes unsolved, for example, less than a quarter of
burglaries lead to charging of an offender - Smith, Taylor and Elkin
 Dramatic fallacy: crime stories often focus on murder and rape, but
these crimes are rare and are usually the result of quarrels or
fighting - Felson
 Ingenuity fallacies: the suggestion that criminals plan their actions
and are clever. However, most crime is opportunistic, so people act
on impulse, perhaps taking less than a minute to commit an act,
rather than it being premeditated
AO3:
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