Germany

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Standard Standard

Germany. / Machura, Stefan; Böhnke, Michael.
A Transnational Study of Law and Justice on TV. ed. / Peter Robson; Jennifer L. Schultz. Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2016. p. 99-112 8.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

HarvardHarvard

Machura, S & Böhnke, M 2016, Germany. in P Robson & JL Schultz (eds), A Transnational Study of Law and Justice on TV., 8, Hart Publishing, Oxford, pp. 99-112.

APA

Machura, S., & Böhnke, M. (2016). Germany. In P. Robson, & J. L. Schultz (Eds.), A Transnational Study of Law and Justice on TV (pp. 99-112). Article 8 Hart Publishing.

CBE

Machura S, Böhnke M. 2016. Germany. Robson P, Schultz JL, editors. In A Transnational Study of Law and Justice on TV. Oxford: Hart Publishing. pp. 99-112.

MLA

Machura, Stefan and Michael Böhnke "Germany". and Robson, Peter Schultz, Jennifer L. (editors). A Transnational Study of Law and Justice on TV. Oxford: Hart Publishing. 2016, 99-112.

VancouverVancouver

Machura S, Böhnke M. Germany. In Robson P, Schultz JL, editors, A Transnational Study of Law and Justice on TV. Oxford: Hart Publishing. 2016. p. 99-112. 8

Author

Machura, Stefan ; Böhnke, Michael. / Germany. A Transnational Study of Law and Justice on TV. editor / Peter Robson ; Jennifer L. Schultz. Oxford : Hart Publishing, 2016. pp. 99-112

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Germany

AU - Machura, Stefan

AU - Böhnke, Michael

PY - 2016/11/17

Y1 - 2016/11/17

N2 - The article analyses the law-related content on German television shown over a period of four months in November 2016. It is the first study to do so since the author's co-authored study published 2001 as article in the Journal of Law and Society. We observe a drastic change: classic courtroom dramas have disappeared, TV judge shows are only present as repeats and new "reality" formats are conquering the small screen. While the public broadcasters still invest in creating high quality shows and critical historical documentaries and plays, the private companies have specialized on cheap mass entertainment and the repeat of US crime series. Analysing the content of what is shown, it becomes clear that the German law and its institutions and the professions are largely misrepresented. Overall, the portrayal suggests that the people can trust the law.

AB - The article analyses the law-related content on German television shown over a period of four months in November 2016. It is the first study to do so since the author's co-authored study published 2001 as article in the Journal of Law and Society. We observe a drastic change: classic courtroom dramas have disappeared, TV judge shows are only present as repeats and new "reality" formats are conquering the small screen. While the public broadcasters still invest in creating high quality shows and critical historical documentaries and plays, the private companies have specialized on cheap mass entertainment and the repeat of US crime series. Analysing the content of what is shown, it becomes clear that the German law and its institutions and the professions are largely misrepresented. Overall, the portrayal suggests that the people can trust the law.

KW - German legal system

KW - German television

KW - popular legal culture

KW - Law-related TV series

KW - Law-related films

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9781509905683

SP - 99

EP - 112

BT - A Transnational Study of Law and Justice on TV

A2 - Robson, Peter

A2 - Schultz, Jennifer L.

PB - Hart Publishing

CY - Oxford

ER -