Media and Crime

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In an age of information where often perception is reality we are faced with a growing, perhaps misguided reality that society is becoming more violent yet statistically - based on crime rate versus the population figures, the data would suggest otherwise. However if we were to take a straw poll on how individuals perceive the current situation to be, given the information flow, the changing demographic where in Australia crimes are committed by individuals with diverse ethnic backgrounds and nationalities adding ignorance to our views, therefore most would indicate society is in fact far more violent than in the past. If we were able to go back in time to ask these very same questions without having a predisposal to our information, perhaps ignorance would be their excuse in evaluating their own perception.

Indication of the high levels of public concern regarding violent crime have been noted over the years. In April -1986 the Gallup Poll discovered that violent crime was the primary concern for Australians'. This discovery was the first time since 1977 that unemployment had not been the major concern of those polled. Gallup reported that men and women were equally worried about violent crimes. More recent polls confirm these general trends. However, the levels of fear expressed in different parts of the country are likely to have been influenced by local crime events, so if a brutal crime occurred in one state then fallout affect would indicate that the state had major issues with crime, compared to other states.

I think we have a confused state of mind in terms of the perception of violent crime. Reports indicate that as many as one-third of Australian men believe violence towards a spouse or child can be justified in certa...

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... the audience. With news reports constantly being dramatized, the truth about crime is skewed and people are lead to believe that crime in Australia is worse than it actually is. Among various news programs, we also have popular current affairs programs which tend to extend their definitions of crime to include the actions of antisocial behaviour, which then demonize those who have not necessarily committed any crime, but have portrayed antisocial behaviour or immoral values. Viewers are often faced with graphic, dramatic re-enactments, and biased stories, often depicting one as 'evil, out of control and predatory' and the other 'innocent, virtuous and helpless' without any room to dilate upon the topic. These combing factors often discompose the viewer, leading them to believe that even those who aren't criminals, are in fact moral criminals and are to be feared.

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