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Legal Narratives as Significant News Sources About Mental Illness and Violent Crime

NCJ Number
248327
Journal
International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice Volume: 38 Issue: 4 Dated: November 2014 Pages: 343-372
Author(s)
Meron Wondemaghen
Date Published
2014
Length
0 pages
Annotation
Media coverage about people affected by mental illness is an area of research that is extensively examined.
Abstract
Media coverage about people affected by mental illness is an area of research that is extensively examined. Many scholars argue that the media depicts people with mental illness as inherently violent and dangerous within sensational narratives. These depictions are criticized for reinforcing the social stigma and disadvantages many of the mentally ill face. The media does, however, require news sources and, in the context of crime and mental illness, the courts are a significant source. Through qualitative content analysis of Australian newspaper articles, this research examines an under-researched and incompletely theorized area. In doing so, it demonstrates that media depictions of some mentally ill offenders reflect and heavily draw upon legal narratives and what is argued in court about these offenders in the context of criminal responsibility and legal insanity.