Deconstructing dangerous discourse: an analysis of personal safety advice to students on UK universities’ websites

IF 1.7 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Nicola Roberts, Lauren Doyle, Mark Roberts
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In a society pre-occupied with managing risks, individuals are responsibilised to ensure their own safety. In the context of higher education, this might seem useful advice because young university students are at risk of violent victimisation, and they migrate to cities with which they are unfamiliar. However, using Foucauldian discourse analysis, we analysed text about personal safety on all UK universities’ websites to draw out the underlying discourse embedded in the safety advice. We find that students are advised where to walk, when to walk, how to walk or not to walk, and with whom. In seeking to control the movements of potential victims to avoid victimisation, a victim-blaming discourse is evident. The offender is rarely mentioned. Such overt safety advice often impacts upon women more than men. It is argued that given the duplication of such advice across university websites as well as its dated nature, it is likely that universities have given little thought to how they advise their students to keep safe and what the impact of this is. We provide recommendations on how universities can update their personal safety advice to students to be more empowering.
解构危险话语:英国大学网站上对学生人身安全建议的分析
在一个专注于管理风险的社会中,个人有责任确保自身安全。就高等教育而言,这似乎是一个有用的建议,因为年轻的大学生面临暴力伤害的风险,而且他们移居到自己不熟悉的城市。然而,我们运用福柯话语分析法分析了所有英国大学网站上有关人身安全的文本,以找出安全建议中蕴含的潜在话语。我们发现,学生们被告知在哪里行走、何时行走、如何行走或不行走,以及与谁一起行走。在试图控制潜在受害者的行动以避免受害的过程中,明显存在着一种指责受害者的话语。犯罪者很少被提及。这种公开的安全建议对女性的影响往往大于男性。我们认为,鉴于此类建议在大学网站上的重复性以及其过时的性质,大学很可能很少考虑如何建议学生注意安全以及这样做的影响。我们就大学如何更新对学生的个人安全建议以增强其能力提出了建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
20.00%
发文量
49
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