白领犯罪是白人吗?1950 - 2010年全国白领犯罪新闻报道中的种族化

Marina Zaloznaya, Alexandria Yakes, James Wo
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摘要

虽然美国媒体上有很多关于街头罪犯种族化的报道,但媒体对白领犯罪的种族视角仍未得到充分探讨。为了解决这个问题,我们分析了1950年至2010年间五家全国性报纸对贿赂、选举欺诈、逃税和内幕交易的报道。借鉴约翰·哈根(John Hagan, 2012)的作品,我们将白领犯罪在媒体中的种族化追溯到理查德·尼克松(Richard Nixon)担任总统和毒品战争(War on Drugs)的开始。我们还发现,种族是罪犯个性化的一个重要预测因素,或者是作者对他们的描述长度。我们认为,通过将黑人罪犯比白人罪犯更个体化,记者在白领犯罪的背景下隐含了他们的古怪,并有助于将他们作为一个例外的集体框架。最后,我们发现黑人罪犯比白人罪犯得到了更多的正面报道,这进一步强调了他们与刻板印象中的黑人罪犯的区别,以及他们与没有威胁的(白人)美国人的相似性。这些发现支持Hagan(2012)的观点,即街头犯罪的种族化反映在精英经济犯罪作为白人的集体框架中,并且由此延伸,这是美国资本主义的非威胁性副作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Is White-Collar Crime White? Racialization in the National Press Coverage of White-Collar Crime from 1950 to 2010
While much is written about racialization of street criminals in the American media, racial dimensions of the media framing of white-collar crime remain underexplored. To address this issue, we analyze the coverage of bribery, electoral fraud, tax evasion, and insider trading in five national newspapers between 1950 and 2010. Drawing on John Hagan’s (2012) work, we trace the racialization of white-collar crime in the press back to Richard Nixon’s presidency and the beginnings of the War on Drugs. We also find that race is a significant predictor of offenders’ individualization, or the length of description accorded to them by writers. We argue that by individualizing black offenders significantly more than white perpetrators, reporters connote their oddity in the context of white-collar criminality and contribute to their collective framing as an exception. Finally, we find that black perpetrators receive significantly more positive coverage than white offenders, which serves to further underscore their distinctiveness from stereotypical black criminals and their similarity to nonthreatening (white) Americans. These findings support Hagan’s (2012) argument that racialization of street crime is mirrored by the collective framing of elite economic crime as white and, by extension, a nonthreatening side effect of American capitalism.
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