In:
Punishment & Society, SAGE Publications, Vol. 11, No. 4 ( 2009-10), p. 491-510
Abstract:
This article argues that the media frames utilized in the first month after Hurricane Katrina legitimated punishment as disaster policy through lurid reports of individual crime. The application of prevailing state policies led to a quick embrace of punitive policing and incarceration, and journalistic routines ended up supporting this process. Although journalists openly expressed their disgust with state neglect, news conventions nonetheless criminalized much of the New Orleans population and suggested militarized policing and imprisonment as fundamental to restore order. Lacking credible sources, reporters relied on rumors and helped create a racialized ‘looter class’ that aided state efforts to regain control through existing policies of mass incarceration rather than mutual aid or state welfare. Even though various media outlets recanted the more extreme elements of this coverage, the tropes they employed created a lasting effect. Building off Stuart Hall et al.’s (1978) analysis of a moral panic over mugging in 1970s England, this article examines both the conventions and consequences of this crisis coverage. The result, I argue, bolstered the existing crisis of incarceration.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
1462-4745
,
1741-3095
DOI:
10.1177/1462474509341139
Language:
English
Publisher:
SAGE Publications
Publication Date:
2009
detail.hit.zdb_id:
1491224-7
SSG:
2,1