Changing representations of organized crime in the Italian press
Changing representations of organized crime in the Italian press
Organized crime has long captured the attention of media, with books, movies, television, and the press offering different representations of what organized crime is. These representations tend to vary in different countries according to the specific coverage and reporting preferences of local media. The ways in which organized crime is framed by the media is of great importance, as mediated images of organized crime may have powerful effects on both the general public and policy-makers. The narrative presented, however, might be distorted and not fully correspond to the notion of organized crime as framed by academic communities. Particularly in the Italian scenario, scholarly definitions and narratives around organized crime have evolved and have been refined meaningfully over the years, presenting a complex, multi-layered, and diversified criminal panorama. Several studies have recently addressed press representations of Italian organized crime in the foreign press. However, the way in which the Italian press has represented the changing rhetoric on organized crime has so far been under-investigated. This research presents the results of a longitudinal media analysis of a selection of Italian newspapers, which aims to inspect the ways in which the press has represented the threats posed by organized crime over time.
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Di Ronco, Anna
9a9633e3-b1e1-46a2-9130-78a2f842d09e
Lavorgna, Anita
6e34317e-2dda-42b9-8244-14747695598c
March 2018
Di Ronco, Anna
9a9633e3-b1e1-46a2-9130-78a2f842d09e
Lavorgna, Anita
6e34317e-2dda-42b9-8244-14747695598c
Di Ronco, Anna and Lavorgna, Anita
(2018)
Changing representations of organized crime in the Italian press.
Trends in Organized Crime, 21 (1), .
(doi:10.1007/s12117-016-9270-7).
Abstract
Organized crime has long captured the attention of media, with books, movies, television, and the press offering different representations of what organized crime is. These representations tend to vary in different countries according to the specific coverage and reporting preferences of local media. The ways in which organized crime is framed by the media is of great importance, as mediated images of organized crime may have powerful effects on both the general public and policy-makers. The narrative presented, however, might be distorted and not fully correspond to the notion of organized crime as framed by academic communities. Particularly in the Italian scenario, scholarly definitions and narratives around organized crime have evolved and have been refined meaningfully over the years, presenting a complex, multi-layered, and diversified criminal panorama. Several studies have recently addressed press representations of Italian organized crime in the foreign press. However, the way in which the Italian press has represented the changing rhetoric on organized crime has so far been under-investigated. This research presents the results of a longitudinal media analysis of a selection of Italian newspapers, which aims to inspect the ways in which the press has represented the threats posed by organized crime over time.
Text
DiRoncoLavorgna2016.pdf
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 27 February 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 March 2016
Published date: March 2018
Organisations:
Sociology, Social Policy & Criminology
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 388807
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/388807
ISSN: 1084-4791
PURE UUID: c3125881-8bfe-48af-b34b-f3d0794410cc
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Date deposited: 03 Mar 2016 14:02
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:25
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Author:
Anna Di Ronco
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