NCJ Number
              139392
          Journal
  Media Studies Journal Volume: 6 Issue: 1 Dated: (Winter 1992), 183-194
Date Published
  1992
Length
              12 pages
          Annotation
              The anticommunist revolution in the former Soviet Union has resulted in a dramatic increase in crime reporting; borrowing from the experiences of the Western media, crime reporting in Russia is becoming a distinct field of journalism.
          Abstract
              Over the past 100 years, Russian crime reporting has combined three approaches. The analytical approach emphasizes the socioeconomic and psychological roots of crime, while the descriptive component provides basic facts and figures about crime, and the sensational aspect focuses on high-profile crimes which are usually politically motivated. The author terms these approaches Russian, European, and American, respectively. Under communism, the coverage of crime changed radically as Soviet leaders banned any publication of crime statistics, and the American-style sensational reporting was restricted to political offenders.  However, the dawn of glasnost gradually lifted the censorship on crime reporting. Crime in the Soviet Union is higher than in most Western countries, and it leads in several crime categories. While both newspaper and television reporting have largely resorted back to the traditional, European style of crime reporting, there has been a rapid expansion of the sensational style of reporting.