Representations of Law, Rights and Criminal Justice

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    Abstract

    Criminal justice and its institutions are key objects of popular culture and attract extensive media attention. The portrayal of the justice system, its rules, professions, and institutions has been invigorated with the invention of new media technology. The authorities’ reaction to wrong doing has proven not less exciting to the audience than the criminal acts themselves. French sociologist Emile Durkheim emphasized that every member of society has an interest in social cohesion and wishes to see perpetrators appropriately punished. The media plays to this basic inclination. From the reactions of the justice system to crime people take clues not only for its effectiveness but the public also wants to see its basic values represented in the work of officials and their decisions. Therefore, aspects of procedural and distributive justice are picked up by popular imagination and exploited to the full by media producers. Beyond recognition that media depictions of criminal justice will follow media conventions and will therefore be distorted in systematic ways, it has to be acknowledged that those representations and the expectations they formed have become a major force in society. Political repercussions and influences on how crime is dealt with are a consequence.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationOxford Research Encyclopedia of Criminology
    Place of PublicationNew York
    PublisherOxford University Press USA
    Pages1-27
    Number of pages27
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2018

    Keywords

    • courts
    • judges
    • prosecutors
    • lawyers
    • law film
    • courtroom drama
    • TV law series

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