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Young People and Moral Panic

DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY. Young People and Moral Panic. SOCI0067: Crime and the Media Lecture 9 Dr. L. Cho, PhD E-mail: Lifcho@gmail.com. What is Moral Panic?. Public reactions to individuals whose behaviour threatens dominant values and culture

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Young People and Moral Panic

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  1. DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY Young People and Moral Panic SOCI0067: Crime and the Media Lecture 9 Dr. L. Cho, PhD E-mail: Lifcho@gmail.com

  2. What is Moral Panic? • Public reactions to individuals whose behaviour threatens dominant values and culture • Media plays central role in facilitating dominant group’s outrage • Reaction disproportionate to perceived threat

  3. Why Study Moral Panic • Happens all the time • It has become essential part of political process and elections • Analyze how power works: the press, pressure groups, politicians, police, public • How and why some public policies emerge

  4. UK Moral Panic Model:Stan Cohen Folk Devils and Moral Panics (1972) • Studied clashes between two groups of young people called ‘Mod and Rockers’ • Media’s role in developing a ‘deviancy amplification spiral’

  5. Cohen: Deviancy Amplification Spiral • The initial outbreak abnormal behaviour • Generated enormous media reaction (newsworthiness) • Forced the police to intervene more strongly in subsequent disturbances • Increasing numbers arrested • Leads to a spiral of increasing police activity and public concern Source: http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/file.php/1366/formats/print.htm

  6. Moral Panic Informs Social Changes • Cause of panic and focus (e.g. Ketamine used by young people) • Uncertainty and anxiety about the rapid changes in modern life (e.g. legal/illegal immigrants often the focus of moral decline in society) • Challenges dominant values (HIV/AIDS prompted attack on homosexuality, challenging heterosexuality) • Attempts to reestablish moral boundaries (recreational drug use)

  7. Stanley Cohen: Folk Devils and Moral Panic • First recorded conflict of the Mods and Rockers • Clacton on Easter Sunday 1964 Seaside Resort • Fight broke out • Beach vandalised, windows broken • 97 people arrested • Next day national newspaper headlines: • “Wild Ones Invade Seaside – 97 Arrests (Daily Mirror) • "Day of Terror by Scooter Groups" (The Daily Telegraph)

  8. Cohen: Folk Devils and Moral Panic • Cohen's criticism: media coverage exaggerated and distorted facts • Phrases include 'orgy', 'riot', 'siege', and 'screaming mob' were incorporated into the text • Exaggeration of the numbers involved • Misperception that it is more violent than the facts support • Moral entrepreneurs: people who start the panic fearing a threat to dominant social or cultural values • Folk devils: people who threatens the social order

  9. Folk Devils: Mods (Modernists) • Subculture originated in the UK • Wore tailored suits and fashion conscious • Listened to Beatles, the Who, Rolling Stones • Drove scooters

  10. Folk Devils: Rockers (Rock n Roll) • Biker tough image, wore black leather jackets • Listened to rock n roll • Working class backgrounds • Rode motorbiks

  11. Media Presentation • Folk Devils: stylized and stereotypical fashion • Moral entrepreneurs: editors, religious groups, politicians emerge as moral authorities • Pronounce the problem and offers solutions to cope with “threat”

  12. Examples of Moral Panic 60’s Hippie Culture, Drugs and Sexual Freedom 70’s Young Black Muggers 80’s Missing Children(Joel Best 1990) 90’s Child Abuse (Philip Jenkins 2001) 00’s Internet Predator

  13. 90’s Child Abuse (Philip Jenkins 2001) • Studied the response to child abuse and the moral panics • Examined how attitudes, while shifting, have basically remained the same over 100 years

  14. Folk Devil: To Catch a Predator • Folk Devilbecome subject of loosely organized but pervasive campaigns of hostility (Perverted Justice) • Mass media can get in on the act, creating further controversies • To Catch a Predator is a series of hidden camera investigations by the TV newsmagazine Dateline NBC • It identifies and detains potential child sexual abusers who attempt to contact minors over the internet ..

  15. Controversies Around the Show • Do shows like these “To Catch a Predator” contribute to moral panic? • Is it entrapment? • Are the alleged criminals given due process

  16. Moral Panic • Threat could be “new” • Threat could have been around, but suddenly appears as problem • Panic passes over, forgotten • Some become more serious, long lasting, producing changes in social policy

  17. Moral Outrage Directed at “Subculture” • Criminals (murderers, drug sellers/buyers, pedophiles, etc.) • Behaviour strays conventional codes of conduct (strikers, protesters) • Behaviour or style of dress different from the norm (hippies, rappers) • Fail to conform to conventional ideas such as the institution of family

  18. Five Elements of Moral Panic • Ordinary >>> Extraordinary • Deviance amplification spiral • Clarify moral boundaries • Occur at a time of social change • Youth focused

  19. Element 1: Ordinary >>> Extraordinary • Media construct moral panic according to criteria of news value • News value: key factors for turning an actual event into news story • News value: trend, what has happened will inevitably happen again

  20. News Story Test: “Can My Mother Understand This?” • Simplification through symbolization • Names made to signify complex ideas and emotions • Word: “Mod” (Modern): becomes symbolic of a status (deviant) • Object: Form of clothing (motorbike) signify status and negative emotions • What neutral before now has negative connotation?

  21. What word or object was neutral before now has negative connotation in HK? Gay? Rap music? Video games? Internet bar (in China)?

  22. Element 2: Deviance Amplification Spiral • Moral discourse established by journalists, news editors, politicians, police, interest groups • Collectively demonize perceived wrong doer as source of moral decline and social disintegration • Set in motion a series (spiral) of events • Attention given to deviants leads to criminalization and marginalization

  23. Deviance Amplification Spiral • Interest groups who use the media to make moral statement about group or behaviour • Those in power label group as subversive with view to exploit public fear • Step in to provide “solution” (“tough on crime”, “3 strikes and you are out”)

  24. Deviance Amplification Spiral • Increased attention validates media initial concern • Target group feels alienated • Politicians and other claims maker demands action to control deviants

  25. Deviance Amplification Spiral • Society outlaw particular group • Negative social reaction escalates • Deviants become isolated • Become criminally oriented

  26. Spiral of Deviance • Occur for a period of weeks, months, never out of control • Media interest wanes • Media moves on to other issues • Folk devil becomes familiar • Perceived less as threat • Due to new laws or mundane strategies

  27. Time Magazine 3 July 1995 • Photo of horrified child • New study released by Carnegie Mellon, premiere computer science school in the US Source: Marwick, Alice. "To catch a predator? The MySpace moral panic" First Monday [Online], Volume 13 Number 6 (19 May 2008) Available at: http://www.uic.edu/htbin/cgiwrap/bin/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/2152/1966

  28. Cyberporn Scare • Study found 83.5% of online images were pornographic • Adult materials available online was more extreme and problematic than in print and video

  29. Cyberporn Scare • News story gave strong evidence to politicians’ claims that pornography ran rampant on the internet • Readily available to children • Article prompted nation-wide media interest topic • Prompting the introduction of several legislations to tighten control of the internet

  30. Controlling Social Networking Websites and Chat Rooms • Prohibiting schools and libraries from giving minors access to sites like MySpace • Could include educational and useful websites like blogs, Wikipedia, Google Groups, and Yahoo! • Cyberporn Panic Led To Technopanic • Panic over the uses of new computer-mediated technologies used by youngsters

  31. Exaggerated Data • The study results turned out to be largely made up • Did not analyze all on-line images • Looked only at adult bulletin boards and places where adult content was prevalent

  32. Internet Safety Technical Task Force • Created in February 2008 • Attorneys General Multi-State Working Group on Social Networking and MySpace • The scope of the Task Force's inquiry was to consider those technologies that industry and end users - including parents - can use to help keep minors safer on the Internet Source: Enhancing Child Safety and On-line Technology Report http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/pubrelease/isttf/

  33. Findings: • No significant finding that kids are being targeted and lured by adult strangers • It Happens very rarely • Pedophiles are much more likely to be lured themselves by cops staging as kids in sting operations. • Study found that widespread sexual harassment, sexual abuse and sexual solicitation of minors does occur- but that it’s far more likely to come from other kids than from predatory adults • Another finding is that age verification technology doesn’t really work.

  34. In Sum • Child pornography and child abuse are important social issues • No data has yet to show that online predators represent an epidemic • Preventing minors from using MySpace and other social networking sites is misguided • Sensationalized negative coverage of technology frighten parents • Prevents teenagers from responsible usage • Leads to misguided legislation

  35. Element 3:Moral Panic Clarify Moral Boundaries • Creates consensus and concern • Division between us (decent, respectable, moral) and them (deviant, undesirable outsiders)

  36. Manufacturing Consensus • Threat may be real and serious • Does not necessarily constitute universal belief • Press reports it as if it is a consensus • Common underlying message in news: Society is deteriorating, not what it used to be, decline in morals, religions, lack of respect for authority, disintegration of family values • Politicians seen as “family doctor” who identify solutions

  37. Manufacturing Consensus • Sensitizing and legitimizing process of solidifying moral boundaries • Identifying the outsiders • Heightening powers of state control

  38. 80’s Satanic Ritual Abuse • News coverage on a group of satanists kidnapping children to use them for satanic rituals

  39. Satanic Ritual Abuse • Observers claim 50,000 to 60,000 children are murdered each year • No solid evidence found – FBI reports 25,000 homicide rate, 500 stranger abducted children still reported missing 1990-1995 • Sexual molestation is a real problem • Very rarely take place in day-care centres or organized groups • Child pornography rings do exist, but evidence linking to satanism ever found

  40. Moral Panic and Young People • Young people seen as increasingly troublesome • Young people demonized and criminalized • Impression that young people are becoming increasingly unruly • Behaviour that used to be considered normal adolescent, are seen as problems

  41. Promoting Collective Outrage • Combined assault by policy makers, police, and media comes to represent the views of the readers • Widen gap between deviants and society • In turn, this creates social cohesion amongst dominant group • Affirms their own morality

  42. Conventional Accounts of Moral Panic • Emphasize the limits to diversity and toleration in society • Confirm authority of those who are judging

  43. Element 4: Rapid Social Change Increase Social Anxieties About Risk • Society more susceptible at certain times • Destabilizes many aspects of life • Greater pluralism (individuals have more choices) • Aware of new possibilities

  44. Element 5: Young People Target of Moral Panic • Young people represent the future • Behaviour seen as barometer to test health or illness of society • Unconventional styles in dress and behaviour get more noticed • Resist authority, reject tradition makes adults nervous

  45. Young People Easy Target of Moral Panic • Represent increased vitality and social mobility • Linked to having too much wealth and too little morality • Personify change, innovation, experimentation • Conduit of all fears in society about change and unknown

  46. Five Indicators of a Moral Panic (Erich Goode and Nachman Ben-Yehuda, 1994)

  47. 1. Concern • Heightened level of concern over behaviour of certain group • Increased concern about the consequences the behaviours may cause for society • Concern should be manifested or measurable: public opinion polls, public commentary via media attention, proposed legislation, social movement

  48. 2. Hostility: Us vs. Them • Increased level of hostility towards group • Collectively viewed by the public as an enemy, anti-social, deviant • Division is made between ‘us’ – good, decent, respectable folk and ‘them’ – deviant, bad guys, outsiders, criminals

  49. 3. Consensus • Majority of people must agree threat is real and serious, and cause by the ‘deviants’ and their behaviour

  50. 4. Disproportionality • Public concern is in excess of what is appropriate • Concern not justified by empirical evidence • Generation and dissemination of figures are wildly exaggerated • Key concept. If cannot determine disproportionality, cannot conclude given concern represents moral panic

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