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    Through the Looking Glass: How the mass media represent, reflect and refract sexual crime in Ireland

    Citation

    Breen M.J., (2004).'Through the Looking Glass: How the mass media represent, reflect and refract sexual crime in Ireland', Irish Communications Review. Vol.10.
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    Breen M.J.(2004) Through the Looking Glass: How the mass media represent, reflect and refract sexual crime in Ireland. (Journal Article).pdf (387.6Kb)
    Date
    2004
    Author
    Breen, Michael J.
    Peer Reviewed
    Yes
    Metadata
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    Breen M.J., (2004).'Through the Looking Glass: How the mass media represent, reflect and refract sexual crime in Ireland', Irish Communications Review. Vol.10.
    Abstract
    Sexual crimes, against adults and children, represent significant social problem in Ireland as indicated in the SAVI report (McGee et al., 2002). This paper examines the framing, representation and construction of sexual crime in the Irish Times 1993-2002 and RTE news reports. Drawing on the SAVI report as a national prevalence study of sexual abuse, and on the Gardaí sexual crime figures, the paper elaborates the extent to which media reports reflect and distort the reality of sexual crime. The media data are based on a content analysis of a random of sample of five weeks for each year in the study, fifty weeks in all. The findings focus on the differences that exist between prevalence study outcomes and the media representation of the extent and nature of sexual crime. The nature of coverage prevents the development of appropriate public outrage, allows abuse to continue, and works against the production of effective public policies. Finally, the paper examines a potential role for media content and media professionals in terms of creating better public policy.
    Keywords
    MIC
    Publisher
    Irish Communications Review
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10395/102
    Sponsor(s)
    Irish Research Council for Humanities and Social Sciences
    Collections
    • Media and Communication Studies (Peer-reviewed publications)

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