Showing posts with label media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label media. Show all posts

Monday, August 14, 2017

Criminology: Now and then

Your ordinary burglar and forger must pale his ineffectual fires before the brilliant scoundrelism of the man who accepts the fortune of his friend in trust and either spends it in such a way that he is fairly safe in the Bankruptcy Court, or absconds with what is left of it to sunnier climes.
The lengthy quote above appears in an article on the front page of the Pall Mall Gazette on 8 May 1900 which is headlined, simply, ‘Criminology’. It contains many observations of a criminological nature without specifically mentioning any criminologist. We should not be surprised by this (Groombridge, 2007) but it is heartening to note the presumption that readers will know the term. The politics of the paper varied over time - and at this time passed the prime of its radical investigations under W.T Stead - but its compassion and, even, admiration for the ordinary criminal is interesting in th elight of much modern media treatment of crime and criminals.

The opening sentence clearly sees criminology - it is not mentioned specifically again the body of the text - in positivistic but patronisingly compassionate light.
The criminal is an interesting creature considered in the scientific perspective and when in custody. Sometimes he is not all unpleasant; circumstances and a weak will being unable to balance each other, he has fallen into the mire, and lies there with an expression of futile innocence almost ludicrous.
The mention of ‘will’ draws on classicist notions but much of the explanation is a combination of biological, psychological and sociological positivism combined with a desire to be relevant to criminal justice. I intensify this as ‘neo-classical’ in the traction of Tarde. I see this puts me in dispute with the author of the wikipedia page on Neo-classical school (criminology) which aligns it with right realism and name checks social control, drift and rational choice.

Some snippets must suffice:
Crafty criminals […] are few and far between 
the criminal has a brain of inferior quality
the bloodthirsty kind […] general die mad if they be not hanged
the ordinary criminal who suffers imprisonment for petty larceny is quite uninteresting.
In the unlikely event our larcenist becomes expert the Gazette then admits he has: 
many notable characteristics […] persistence of purpose […] may yet sometimes be regarded as evidence of uncommon strength of mind.
It rather relativistically and callously suggests that the burglar:
breaks into the house and carries off the spoons and the tea basket of some respectable mediocrity, who is generally insured against loss of the kind.
They mention the work of Sir Edward Troup at the Home Office to suggest there have been reductions in crime but greater activities by criminals and police.  Two matters are highlighted 1) crimes in seaports by seamen and those who ‘prey on them’ (‘moral scum of the earth’) and 2) the new offences created by the Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1885. Interestingly Troup is said to have had severe doubts about the value of police statistics (Sir Leon Radzinowicz).

The CLAA 1885 will be known to some for its section 11 further criminalising sex between men. We are celebrating its repeal 50 years ago in England and Wales. Most of it was about ‘rescuing’ women - fears of white slavery and dangers to heiresses - but did raise the age of consent to 16 from 12 in 1861 and 13 in 1875. The work of the journalist Stead in the Pall Mall Gazette (The Maiden Tribute of Modern Babylon) on this might be contrasted with MP/editor Labouchere who introduced the section which caught Oscar Wilde and Alan Turing. Stead received a 3 month sentence for his unethical methods, that is purchasing a girl. It is not clear if Labouchere intended his clause to succeed (see his entry in Who's who in Gay and Lesbian History: From Antiquity to World War II).

But all of this is throat-clearing on the way to its fulminations against bent solicitors and the inadequacies of the Law Society (and need for greater regulation) which take up the second half. After listing various scandals they turn to victimology, or victim-blaming; opining:
clients ought to take the most elementary precautions against being swindled
if such ordinary precautions were taken, half of the scandals, which are, indeed, much to numerous to be creditable to a great profession, would not happen.

I don’t know what caused these thoughts on criminology, penology and victimology so must turn to historians. Any thoughts? What was going on then?

Saturday, February 21, 2015

My Crime and Media book reviews: the highlights

I’ve reviewed a number of books on crime and media over the past decade or so.  Most recently Policing and Media: Public Relations, Simulations and Communications, Murray Lee and Alyce McGovern, Routledge, 2014 on this blog.

Many more are published in journals so here are some highlights.

In Crime, Media, Culture I review Anita Lam’s ‘Making Crime Television: Producing entertaining representations of crime for television broadcast’.  Here’s an extract:

Lam’s ethnography takes us through the thinking, writing, rewriting and re-rewriting involved in getting a crime show idea to script, then filmed for TV in North America. She rightly points out crucial legal, political and cultural differences between Canada and the USA and alludes to some in UK/Europe. That ranges from different regulatory regimes to different numbers and length, or even existence, of advertising breaks. The setting for, and partial funder, of the various series she examines is Canada; but for sound commercial reasons, including the Writers Guild of America strike 2007/8, Toronto often stands in for Anywhere/Anytime. One of the series briefly gets a showing on a US network.

Brooding over all this is the hydra-headed CSI franchise and skulking in the corner is The Wire. The latter is lauded by the critics and studied or referenced by academics (guilty) but is not a ratings success. CSI may be studied by academics for its effects but more still by networks seeking to replicate its success.

Lam makes something of the five (usually)-act structure of such shows and once even metaphorically presents her material as if she were a detective assembling the suspects in the drawing room but her book has an introduction, five chapters and conclusion. The introduction is materially substantial enough to warrant an act/chapter of its own, as is the conclusion, which she does not explicitly foreshadow in the introduction.

The following all appeared in The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice:

Law and Order (BFI TV Classics). By C. Brundson Volume 50, Issue 4, pages 441–442, September 2011

Here’s an extract:

Though a short book, it is a model: in examining the text, the means of its production and critical reception.  Crime and criminal justice are at the heart of the text and criminal justice politics at the heart of the reception.  The Police Federation, the Prison Officers Association and assorted MPs objected strongly.  BBC minutes reveal that some of the difficulties of production turned on the delicate relationship between Government and broadcaster.  Perhaps too much is made of the, then, shared ministerial responsibility for broadcasting and criminal justice but the Home Office did refuse assistance during production, and access for news and current affairs after broadcast.  Such was the fuss that a repeat was delayed until 1980. Until the DVD release in 2008 it remained an ‘absent classic’.


Framing Crime: Cultural Criminology and the Image by K.J. Hayward and M. Presdee (Eds.) Volume 49, Issue 4, pages 421–422, September 2010

Here’s the extract:

Hindley appears again in Jones and Wardle’s discussion of the image of Maxine Carr.  They carry out a quantitative and qualitative content analysis of the images of Carr and Huntley.  They find a concentration on Carr which could be taken to indicate an equality of responsibility (or ‘evil’ in tabloidese) which were it set out in cold print might have constituted contempt of court.  A damning irony is that the images analysed were alleged by newspapers to fall under the subsequent ‘Mary Bell’ order granting Carr lifelong anonymity, so could not be used here.  Gender is an issue but they find a case from the late 1960s where a woman initially covered for her murderous husband yet faced no prosecution and little press censure.

Yar runs through the reasons for criminology to engage with film (valid, but missing the extent to which legal studies already has - see Greenfield et al, 2001) and gives and discusses others analyses of, mostly US, films.  Perhaps under Hayward’s strictures about what the book is not about it sticks to marxist/modernist and postmodern readings of film ignoring the vast feminist and psycho-analytical tradition, mentioning Mike Nellis’s 1988 article on British prison movies in this journal (27: 1) only in passing.


Criminal Visions: Media Representations of Crime and Justice P. Mason (Ed.) Vol. 43, No. 3, pp. 341-355, July 2004

Here’s the extract:

Mason admits the reason for the book is his own search for a book to teach media and crime courses and his desire to cover the visual – so I cannot complain about the lack of a radio chapter.  He also sets out the logic behind the division of the book into three parts: part 1 concentrates on the concerns of the media; part 2 on the construction of offences and offenders and part 3 on representations on of criminal justice.

So part 1 quite appropriately starts with Reiner et al setting out their work on press coverage of crime.  They affirm the relevance of Surette’s ‘law of opposites’ – that media representations of crime are largely the opposite of ‘reality’.  Two interesting points are: the finding of the under-representation of black people as criminals (p21), which goes unexplored, and their conclusion that there is an increased tendency to see crime as hurting individual victims rather than morality, the law or society.  Julian Petley has written elsewhere about the ‘media effects’ debate, here he is concerned with an analysis of the treatment by the British Board for Film Classification and the Video Appeals Committee of a video release of Wes Craven’s The Last House on the Left.  They ignored his advice.  Innes concludes the part by examining ‘signal crimes’ such as the murders of James Bulger and Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman.  Such crimes ‘function as mnemonics, subsequently framing the production of new signal crimes, which in turn reverberate with meaning for their audiences.’ (p66)

Crime and Law in Media Culture S. Brown Vol. 43, pp. 99-111, February 2004

Here’s the extract:

In late August 2003 the Chief Constable of Manchester, Michael Todd, was reported, by many papers, as saying: ‘Some of them would have been better off being interviewed by someone who has watched The Bill or Inspector Morse’.  He was describing his observations of his own officers interviewing burglary suspects.  Several days earlier his force had arrested a BBC undercover reporter who had undergone full training and was now on probation.  The journalist had infiltrated to investigate allegations of racism.  In the same month Jake Arnott published truecrime: the third volume of his gangster trilogy, which contains as much criminology as it does literary allusion and action.  All of these, and more, examples come too late for inclusion in Brown’s book but I think they illustrate her contention that ‘empirical’ or ‘administrative’ criminologies, render crime no more comprehensible and law no more legitimate than do the supposedly ‘fictive’ cultural maps of detective novels, or the imagined justice of the courtroom drama, or the hybrid genres of news docudrama and reality TV. (p182)

Policing and the Media: Facts, fictions and factions Frank Leishman and Paul Mason. Cullompton:Willan (2003) Volume 42, Issue 4, pages 397–407, September 2003

Here’s the extract:

On 26 February 2003 Detective Superintendent Craig Denholm of Surrey police wrote to the Guardian to complain of the hypocrisy of that paper’s leader the previous day, which had attacked police handling of the arrest of TV presenter Matthew Kelly.  Just as in previous years the tabloids had raised the stakes over paedophilia, so the broadsheets and mid-market tabloids now weighed in on behalf of the wrongly accused.  The same day the Daily Express spent 1,766 words on this and a number of other cases ranging from the arrest of Neil and Christine Hamilton to football manager David Jones and other less well-known names.  Det. Supt. Denham made the point that the Police had never named Kelly and had only acted so quickly – arresting him at the theatre – after the media had named Kelly.  So the police blame the media and some parts of the media blame other parts.  Then, to put it as this book does, others take those facts and create fiction and ‘faction’. By faction they mean the, “uneasy amalgam of ‘fact’ and ‘fiction’ that often goes under the name ‘infotainment’.” (p4)  However, as the Superintendent’s bitterness indicates, faction suggests antagonistic groups and the division is not just between police and media.  The Daily Star’s leader of 25 February is a masterpiece of insinuation, opening with these words: “Matthew Kelly is innocent. Everyone says so.  Dave Lynn, the drag queen he used to live with.  All the luvvies who've worked with him.  Even Jonathan King. And now, Surrey police agree too.”


Y. Jewkes, Captive Audience: Media, Masculinity and Power in Prisons and R.C. Mawby, Policing Images: Policing, Communication and Legitimacy, Vol. 42, pp. 93-104, 2003

Here’s the extract:

Whilst both deal with the media it is Jewkes book that specifically addresses theories of media. in Chapter 1 in parallel with her review of the prison literature - specifically the importance of 'doing', 'killing' and 'marking' time.  Particularly important - given her emphasis on masculinities (derived from Connell and Messerschmidt) - is the tendency in some media theory of seeing TV viewing and radio listening as 'passive'.  Within media theory both right and left have their versions of this.  Thus for the right the media subverts all that is good - respect for motherhood and homemade apple pie - and replaces it with promiscuity and ersatz 'pop tarts'.  Equally for the left the media is a 'narcotic' (anyone remember the Yippies?) or a tool of capital (for instance, noting Silvio Berlusconi's control of the Italian State and commercial media respectively as prime minister and owner).  To overcome the deficiencies of these 'hypodermic' or 'cultural dope' models media theorists have developed the 'uses and gratifications' model. This recognises that audiences can be active in 'reading across the grain' of media texts.  Jewkes uses Bourdieu and Giddens (discussed in Chapter 2) to emphasise the interplay of structure and agency in the uses made and the gratifications available to prisoners through various media. Thus the deprivations of imprisonment can be seen to structurally emasculate far more effectively that the castration visited on the couch potato.  She notes, 'like the unemployed, prison inmates are likely to have a far greater degree of attachment to and appreciation of media as a source of entertainment, escapism, identity and opinion reinforcement, social interaction, or simply a means of enduring painfully slow-moving periods of time' (p63).  As we can see watching television or listening to radio has never been so active.

Where Jewkes is largely looking at the reception of media by audiences, Mawby examines the extent to which the media is shaped by the police or, indeed the extent to which the image created of the police is the police. Clearly an ideological reading of the police as reflection or refraction of class, race or gender power has always hinted at this. In using the term image work he recognises that some effort is expended even if he doesn't quite see it in terms of a or 'the' struggle (no Gramsci or Althusser). Mawby tackles some of the theory (Habermas) but mostly offers a history of police image work and a closely observed case study of South Yorkshire Police.  Thus the first two chapters are given over to setting out the four phases he identifies in the history of police image work: 1829-1919 (informal but evident in the choice of uniform and force orders); 1919-1972 (starting from the formation of the Met's Press Bureau and including the 'golden age' of PC Dixon); 1972-1987 (the appointment of Robert Mark and the art of 'winning by appearing to lose') and finally from 1987 (increased professionalism and Imbert's change of force to service and the appointment of Wolff Olins as corporate identity consultants.


News, Crime and Culture M. Wykes Pluto (2001) Vol. 41, pp. 209-217, 2002

Here’s the extract:

Early on Maggie Wykes sets out the premise of this book, which is:

that the media actively, routinely but not exclusively constructed discourses of legitimacy empathic with the interests of conservatism during the period of the Tory Governments of Margaret Thatcher (1979-92) and John Major (1992-97) (p25)

Thus readers will not be surprised to find that the crimes covered are: the criminalisation of black communities; the working class; youth; the homeless; violence between men and women and sex and sexuality.

A context for all this is given in the first chapter which charts the course of a number of ‘criminological crises’.  In short this sets out the marxist and feminist challenges to conventional mainstream criminology.  She argues that it has systematically failed to understand let alone reduce crime moreover that, ‘for most people the major source of information about crime is mass media news.’ (p8) . It is a commonplace to show the news media routinely over report some crimes and under report others.  Thus our understanding of murder (and, as I write, of terrorism) is clearly mediated by press and broadcasting. Yet if we draw the definition of media as broadly as the third term of the book’s title - culture - then there can scarcely be a time when this was not the case.  Those who crowded to the theatre of Shakespeare to see Corialanus or Greek Tragedy should have been as frightened as the inhabitants of Morse’s corpse-strewn Oxford.  However, direct and local experience of everyday mundane crimes such as vandalism, harassment and discrimination is not mediated in quite the same fashion.  Tudor patrons of the theatre would experience the cutpurse much as the modern city dweller experiences ‘mugging’ today – directly.  Wykes is right that there is clearly a punitive discourse in much current media.  However, it is less clear that this can easily be traced back unequivocally to the demands of capitalism or its political puppets.


I also reviewed Crime and Culture: an Historical Perspective Amy Gilman Srebnick and René Lévy Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing (2005) for HoJo but can’t find it was ever used.  So here full text.

I asked to review this book because I am trying to write something on 'cultural criminology' however this is not a work of cultural criminology but of history. It is a history of criminology, of criminal justice and of representations of crime; with three or four articles on each.  This review necessarily concentrates on the criminological and the cultural not the history but there are arguments around historical method, Foucault and narrative to detain those with appropriate knowledge.

Not only are all but two of the thirteen contributors historians – only Clive Emsley will be known to most UK criminologists – but many are European and their work is presented in translated American English.  Moreover, much of the work has its genesis in conferences of the International Association for the History of Crime and Criminal Justice.  So this book suffers from some of the usual problems of such a collection.

The editors’ short introduction sees the history of crime providing ‘a way to study time, place, and culture’ (xiii) and claims ‘there are important continuities in the history of crime and its representations in modern culture, despite particularities of time and place’ (ibid).  A major source of continuity are media texts; broadly drawn to include news media, dime novels and Arrêts Criminels.   Other texts analysed include published criminological texts and unpublished police records.  Less interesting to HJCJ readers will be those like Rousseaux on a Belgian Department under French Rule in 1789 which is only tangentially about crime – the violence of a revolt and its suppression – and culture – French and Flemish perspectives.  Mátay and Csepeli introduce us to a legendary Hungarian Highwayman and the brief media flowering in the late 1990s of a bank robber likened to him. Miller’s account of dime novels doesn’t go much beyond noting a number of themes that will be recognizable to most readers – incompetent police, maverick private eye, innocence wronged etc. Lévy unpicks the legal fall out from a police drugs sting that went wrong – officers sent to prison - but doesn’t specifically tie it to an understanding of the culture of Police, Customs or civil servants involved.

Leaving aside these and the historical, indeed historiographical, first chapter we have six interesting chapters with three on criminology and three on police. Turning first to the criminology: Peter Becker deploys a Foucauldian method on the discourse of German criminology texts from the late 18th to the early 20th Century; Mary Gibson examines the ‘scientific’ narratives of Italian Criminology from 1880-1920 and Herbert Reinke discusses the influence of the criminologist Robert Heindl on policing before, during and after the Nazi period.

More central to criminological concerns is Gibson’s work as it relates to Lombroso and his acolytes, moreover she has recently translated – with Nicole Hahn Rafter – his work, with Ferrerro, on women and crime.  She notes his use of quantitative and qualitative narratives to show a particular sort of wrinkling on the skin of women criminals is evidenced by ‘the old woman of vinegar’ - said to have assisted women kill their husbands and memorialised in the museum of Palermo and granted a photo in Criminal Women.  Gibson asks is this bad science or a means – at the time – of strengthening his arguments by deploying both scientific and popular discourses to forge his new, and powerful, knowledge?  She notes, ‘criminal anthropologists were indefatigable in giving lectures and writing articles for popular audiences’ (40).

She analyses an article Lombroso wrote about the capture of a celebrated brigand which moves from derision at the forces of law, to the claim for the superiority of his methods - based solely on a picture of the man - before returning to admiration for his intelligence.  As this is later in his career, and consonant with his socialism, he mentions the poverty and illiteracy of the man’s background before slipping into casual ethnic stereotyping.  Rather than wondering why he wrote so badly or the editor did not rein him in she feels Lombroso is appealing to various audiences in the one text.  She gives a similar reading of Ferrero’s account of a murder by a casual prostitute but notes too the sexism and the anxieties that women’s crime raised.  Finally she analyses an article in a police and prison staff journal.  It is the notes of a lecture given by a disciple of Lombroso’s, Salvatore Ottolenghi, where a thief was physically and psychologically examined before a class.  Again it is a diverse text as the lecturer, the note taker and the thief all have a voice.  That is positivism took off because it told good stories.

Allen Steinberg examines a case of police corruption and murder in New York that lead to an officer, Charles Becker, going to the electric chair in 1915.  Politicians were involved in the case and often, through the media, in using it to pursue their own ends.  Jean-Marc Berlière shows how the narratives deployed by police during the Nazi occupation to gain promotion or bonuses could redound on them as collaborators.  Clive Emsley’s examines the case of Sergeant Goddard, sentenced to 18 months hard labour with a £2,000 fine in 1929.


Police and official historians note with satisfaction that he was bought to book by the police themselves – the rotten apple – but Emsley wonders if a diseased orchard was to blame.  He gives tables for those dismissed or transferred from the same Division.  Some were old hands others new recruits but the vice beat proved as problematic then as in later scandals of the 60s and 70s.  Clearly the media had a field day but he uses the historical records to flesh out the culture of the police then.  He comes nearest to cultural criminology when footnoting the fact that Spike Milligan may have met one of the criminals involved.

Monday, January 19, 2015

Book Review: Policing and Media: Public Relations, Simulations and Communications, Murray Lee and Alyce McGovern, Routledge, 2014

In February 2014 the UK’s Channel 4 showed a 95 minute long pilot episode of Babylon.  As is common in TV dramas now, it was multi-stranded with an ensemble cast.  A central strand of that episode was, as Channel 4’s website says:
London's police force is in need of a public image revamp. And Chief Constable Richard Miller, played by James Nesbitt, has found just the woman to do it… American visionary from the world of new media, Liz Garvey, played by Brit Marling, sets out to revolutionise the force's PR department just as an outbreak of violence erupts.
This squarely addresses the issues raised in Lee and McGovern’s book.  The interplay between media (new and old) and policing, the significance of the trans Atlantic (indeed global) and the depiction of that in the media.  As they assert, ‘Policing in the twenty-first century is nothing if not hyperreal (p6).

They open their book with a long quote from Kym Charlton’s final post on the Queensland Police Service Facebook page as she stood down as Director of Police Media.  She invokes the continued relevance of ‘Peelian Principles’ but also the new media landscape in which they had 363,500 ‘likes’ (476,000 as of 2 June 2014).  They must have started earlier than the Metropolitan Police who only have 28,187 from a larger potential population.  The NYPD have garnered 237,000 since February 2012 when they joined Facebook.

The use of the quote from Charlton is very appropriate as Lee and McGovern meditate upon, much that she has to say.  All of which is made relevant to non-Australian readers; as they cite international experts such as Mawby, Reiner and Surette.  Their extensive research is Australian but they always relate it to the wider policing and media worlds.  There is, however, a sense in which the research came first, leading to the many conference presentations and journal articles that are a basis for the book.

The hyperreal affords no time to catch up.  Clearly, as they were writing this, events in the UK took a very public, and ongoing, turn with Lord Justice Leveson’s Inquiry into ‘the culture, practices and ethics of the press and, in particular, the relationship of the press with the public, police and politicians’. Lord Justice Leveson opened the hearings on 14 November 2011, saying: “The press provides an essential check on all aspects of public life. That is why any failure within the media affects all of us. At the heart of this Inquiry, therefore, may be one simple question: who guards the guardians?”

The ‘guardian’ quote is well known to police scholars but here Leveson suggests that the press are the guards of police and politicians and vice versa in creative tension.  However, his Inquiry and subsequent events suggest a more collusive tension.  The more narrowly focussed Inquiry by Elizabeth Filkin found, ‘there were a range of problems in the relationship between the MPS and the media and much needs to be done to make the necessary improvements. I am delighted to hear that the MPS is signed up to them.”

All of these developments are covered by Lee and McGovern but since then Operations Elveden (alleged payments by journalists to police and others) Weeting (phone hacking) and Tuleta (computer hacking and other privacy breaches) have rumbled into action (arrests listed here).  Moreover, allegations of undercover police spying on green groups and the family of Stephen Lawrence, Plebgate and the riots after the shooting of Mark Duggan have all perturbed the nation and any easy relationship between media and police.  The authors cannot have foreseen these events and some of their Australian examples have resonances.  The hyperreal vortex means few of us can keep up across time zones.  As they conclude, ‘In five years time […] this analysis, like the newspaper still rolled up on the coffee table, may also be old news’ (p213).
What we might cling to in all of this is theory.  The core is their synthesis of Garland’s Cultures of Control, De Certeau’s observations on everyday life and O’Malley’s thoughts on ‘simulated justice’.  That is, ‘a simulated form of policing that we believe has grown in chorus and which complements the simulated processes and strategies outlined by O’Malley’ (p71) but operating in a cultural realm unexplored by him.  They make three points from this.  First, they recognise the importance of the image of police even from Peel’s time but now claim, ‘the representation of policing is policing - or at least a simulation or simulacra of traditional policing’ (p72, emphasis in original).  Secondly, ‘simulated policing is more than than a cynical attempt at spin produced by increasingly professional and savvy public relations units’ (p72).  That is these units and staff largely believe in it.  Thirdly, and squarely with O’Malley, they suggest this simulated policing has ‘potentially unlimited public reach’ (p73).  That is whilst there is research on police/public interaction and satisfaction etc virtual/simulated interactions have yet to be adequately researched.  This ‘simulation’ occurs in Mathiesen’s synoptic ‘viewer society’.
The book is organised around three sections.  The first section of three chapters runs through the police and media literature, practice and introducing ‘simulated policing’.  The second section examines this form of policing through chapters on the press release, social media and reality TV.  All of those may fail as ‘policing’ and examples are given but the final section of two chapters on ‘policing the police’ examines active resistance to police and policing through new and old media.  Clearly some fails and resistance overlap or feed into and upon each other.  Much resistance is seen to be a tactic of the weak in De Certeau’s terms.  The final conclusion opens with the Boston Marathon bombing and the use made by the police, and others, of new media - often as a source for, or corrective to, old media.  There is also an appendix on research methods showing the breadth and depth of their qualitative and quantitative engagement.  Methods are not for everyone, but more might have been made of this.  The publisher might be behind such a decision to downplay this aspect.
Some of the problems of the book are caused by attempting to cover different forces on different continents with different media ecologies.  However, that is also the source of its strengths.  But a few points need to be made.  They note, ‘Today Scotland Yard employs ex News Corporation staff to manage their media profile’ (p61).  Already this news is old, indeed turned out to be part of the problem, as in March 2102 the Met's PR chief Dick Fedorcio resigned over his employment of such staff.  He was replaced by a Channel 4 TV News editor.
They rightly note the sousveillance of police by ‘citizen journalists’ and activists (from Rodney King to Ian Tomlinson) but don’t cover the growth of police use of body cameras.  They quote Greer and McLaughin on a couple of issues but not on the hounding of Sir Ian Blair from office of Met Commissioner by the media.
The emphasis on both factual and fictional coverage of policing aligns them with the work of Leishman and Mason on ‘faction’ which this book usefully updates.  They mention the significance of a number of Australian crime/police shows (Wildside, Blue Heelers and Water Rats), The Wire and the UK’s The Bill.  These are largely treated unproblematically but Anita Lam’s Making Crime Television now offers a more nuanced insider view as she worked ethnographically within some Canadian crime series.  Recently published is Marianne Colbran’s Media Representations of Police and Crime which promises further insights as she was a script writer on The Bill for many years before becoming a criminologist.
So this is a developing area of interest.  It would be interesting, but difficult, to hear other voices/see other representations from around the world.  For instance, is ‘simulated policing’ occurring in Pakistan, Brazil, Russia or Ukraine?  Has it even occurred consistently in Great Britain?  Might some discussion/conclusions be less postmodern outside the global North or where policing has remained more ‘hands on’, for instance Northern Ireland.
Criminologists and policing experts should not be put off by terms like ‘public relations’ or ‘media’ in the title; this book is clearly about policing and a worthy addition to Critical Criminology.  Practitioners of the ‘dark arts’ might enjoy some of the detail.
This review was commissioned by Rutgers Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books website but they rejected it for being too British and having links! 

Saturday, March 08, 2014

How many times women assaulted before reporting to police?

A quick search of newspapers on Lexis Library shows that the claim that a woman suffers 35 instances of domestic violence before she reports to the police is still going strong.  This should not be a surprise as both Women’s Aid and Refuge repeat the statistic. See The Independent  (9 September 2013) or Sarah Wollaston MP writing in the Daily Telegraph (19 June 2013) in the wake of the accusations against Charles Saatchi in respect of his very public assault on Nigella Lawson.  Wollaston says, ‘On average a woman is assaulted 35 times before first contacting the police’ without giving a source and links it to other specific English and Welsh stats.  Further examples are  the Daily Post (North Wales) on December 24, 2009 or Grimsby Evening Telegraph, January 12, 2004 or even The Guardian, October 15, 1993.

Many of the receptions of this stat give no source but Refuge do, as the work of Peter Jaffe (1982) but with no further details of publication or journal title.  Whilst much of his work is featured on his institute’s associated website to end abuse no title as early as this is featured.

I have no doubt about the seriousness of domestic violence or that delays, sometimes fatal, occur in victims reporting.  Any criminologist can take you through the problems of crime stats but this article from Full Fact examines whether the figures were 400,000 or more than double that.  There is also a wealth of research pointing at the delays and poor decision making of the police and other authorities - some of it by Jaffe and various colleagues.  However, I’ve always worried about the prevalence of the statistic and its failure, seemingly, to be updated.

I’ve several times tried to persuade undergrad students doing dissertations to track it down or to update it but without success.  So given the coverage of Clare's’ Law and International Women’s Day I decided to look into it myself.

It did not prove easy.  A search on Google Scholar didn’t seem to throw up a single authored work by him published in 1982 but intimations from references in other work suggested a joint article by Jaffe, P., and Burris, C. A. (1982).  Their  An integrated response to wife battering: A community model. Ottawa: Research Report of the Solicitor General of Canada contains the ’35 times’ figure but is not the main focus.

Some of the confusion might come from Jaffe himself as in  ‘The Impact of Police Charges in Incidents of Wife Abuse’ (with Wolfe, Telford and Austin Journal of Family Violence Vo1 No 1 1986) he incorrectly cites Burris, C. A., and Jaffe, P. (1984). ‘Wife battering: A well-kept secret’ as the source for the ’35 times’ figure!

Jaffe and Burris examined the processing of ‘wife assault’ cases (the terminology of the day) through the criminal justice system in London, Ontario, Canada and found that between January and June of 1979, 222 females reported assaults or threatened assaults by their partners or ex-partners. These women had been assaulted an average of 35 times before 1979.

So an old, small, non-UK study still ‘rules’.  I am sure domestic violence researchers in the UK and elsewhere struggle to get their voices heard in policy and media but guess they must have newer and more relevant figures than Jaffe and Burris.  My hunch is that the continued popularity of the figure is, in part, due to its narrative impact for campaigners and lazy or hard-pressed journalists.


So my challenge to DV researchers is to get your figures into the media.

Thursday, November 24, 2011


There is much to be found in this Burglar's 'dumb' letter. It is reproduced below from the Daily Mail website.

It appears, on the face of it, to be an anti Restorative or Community Justice - indeed even Criminal Justice - but it seems also to have been a form of Governmental 'criminology of the self' (Garland).

The letter was never sent - though we only discover this part way through - but we, potential victims, are meant to heed the wise words of the 'dumb' burglar to ensure we don't become a vitim of crime.

The Mail's final par encapsulates the disgust but also the fascination we all have for crime news:

A spokesman for the UK Neighbourhood Watch Trust said the letter was ‘appalling’, but added: ‘Christmas is coming and people like to leave their curtains open so people can see their lights and their tree, but they need to realise the criminal is looking at their TV, radio, computer and the presents under the tree.’

Obviously in addition to the 'criminology of the self' the Mail adds the 'criminology of the other', the ill-bred and ill-educated burglar. Win win.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Rio de Janeiro appoints first female police chief

Guardian report here.

A hard job - not least the gender stereotypes - which she embraces: "I will be a severe mother. I will punish when necessary and distribute hugs when they are deserved," Very Gene Hunt! But we are reassured, 'Rocha told the newspaper, which described her as a fan of Issey Miyake perfume, high heels and cooking.'

Guessing from this quote most of her officers are men, 'In an interview with O Globo she said she wanted her officers to be "polite, clean-shaven, good-humoured and kind".'

Perp Walk Staged

There are diplomatic and legal issues surrounding the case of Florence Cassez. My concern here is with the suggestion that her arrest was staged for the cameras a day after her arrest.
Link
See this report from Time mag.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Hollyoaks rape trial to use viewers' 'jury'

Outcome of Channel 4 soap's ongoing storyline to be decided off-screen by members of the public


see Guardian article here

Alcohol and Media

"In reality, we see a fairly deep-rooted decline in alcohol consumption which dates back to 2004. That's not something you see acknowledged in the media."

"With newspapers, the headline is always the same: 'Shock rise in binge drinking'. But you look at the figures, and you see alcohol sales are declining.

This BBC report contrasts falling alcohol sales with continued shock reporting rightly seeing it as part of an anti-Labour (their then Licensing Bill) bias in some papers, particularly Daily Mail

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Monday, March 16, 2009

Media Wise

The Centre for Crime and Justice Studies do a piece of research. It is reported in the Times as supporting a crackdown on knife crime. They beg to differ.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Race, Crime and Media

I've only just come across this report. Well worth a look. I'll be using it in my teaching.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Ben Goldacre continues to tell it like it is on science and media. Here he examines the good news of the reduction in murders by the mentally ill - already lower than many think - and the lack of interest by the media in that news.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Crime and Media Students at St Mary's University College

I've just created a group on Facebook for my crime and media students this year. Let's see if this is better than trying to use the College's own VLE.