Representations of Child Sexual Abuse in Jamaica-HBK2.pdf

News media shape public opinion on social issues such as child sexual abuse (CSA), using particular language to foreground, marginalize or legitimize certain viewpoints. Given the prevalence of CSA and the impact of violence against children in Jamaica, there is a need to examine the representation...

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Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2022
Διαθέσιμο Online:https://www.mdpi.com/books/mono/5902
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spelling oapen-20.500.12657-598732024-03-27T14:14:31Z Representations of Child Sexual Abuse in Jamaica Karpenko-Seccombe, Tatyana Nelson, Kenisha Fray, Christine Harvey, Roxanne Powell-Booth, Karyl Jones, Adele Wager, Nadia Sheng, Xiaomin child sexual abuse, Jamaica, news media, discourse, corpus analysis thema EDItEUR::A The Arts::AB The arts: general topics News media shape public opinion on social issues such as child sexual abuse (CSA), using particular language to foreground, marginalize or legitimize certain viewpoints. Given the prevalence of CSA and the impact of violence against children in Jamaica, there is a need to examine the representation of children and their experience of violence in the news media, which remain the main source of information about such abuse for much of the population. The study aims to analyze accounts of CSA in Jamaican newspapers in order to show how different representations impact public understanding of CSA. This study offers a new perspective around child abuse by using an eight-million word corpus from articles over a three-year period (2018- 2020). The study argues that media reports often fail to conceptualise and represent accurately children who have experienced abuse. Representations of children are generic, their experiences often reduced to statistical summaries. Corpus analysis uncovered the use of terms which normalize sexual abuse. From the reader’s perspective, there was little emotional connection to the child or the child’s experience. The newspapers rarely report first-hand survivors’ experience of abuse, depriving these children of a voice. Instead, a marked preference is given to institutional voices. An issue of concern is a tendency to sensationalism with disproportionate attention given to cases involving celebrities. By exposing these problems, the authors hope that news media in Jamaica can play a more positive role in heightening awareness around child abuse and allowing the voices of victims/ survivors to be heard. 2022-12-07T13:21:22Z 2022-12-07T13:21:22Z 2022 book 9783036524672 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/59873 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Representations of Child Sexual Abuse in Jamaica-HBK2.pdf https://www.mdpi.com/books/mono/5902 MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 10.3390/books978-3-0365-2466-5 10.3390/books978-3-0365-2466-5 99f56ef3-04bd-4875-9e06-b59649a200cf 9783036524672 98 Basel open access
institution OAPEN
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language English
description News media shape public opinion on social issues such as child sexual abuse (CSA), using particular language to foreground, marginalize or legitimize certain viewpoints. Given the prevalence of CSA and the impact of violence against children in Jamaica, there is a need to examine the representation of children and their experience of violence in the news media, which remain the main source of information about such abuse for much of the population. The study aims to analyze accounts of CSA in Jamaican newspapers in order to show how different representations impact public understanding of CSA. This study offers a new perspective around child abuse by using an eight-million word corpus from articles over a three-year period (2018- 2020). The study argues that media reports often fail to conceptualise and represent accurately children who have experienced abuse. Representations of children are generic, their experiences often reduced to statistical summaries. Corpus analysis uncovered the use of terms which normalize sexual abuse. From the reader’s perspective, there was little emotional connection to the child or the child’s experience. The newspapers rarely report first-hand survivors’ experience of abuse, depriving these children of a voice. Instead, a marked preference is given to institutional voices. An issue of concern is a tendency to sensationalism with disproportionate attention given to cases involving celebrities. By exposing these problems, the authors hope that news media in Jamaica can play a more positive role in heightening awareness around child abuse and allowing the voices of victims/ survivors to be heard.
title Representations of Child Sexual Abuse in Jamaica-HBK2.pdf
spellingShingle Representations of Child Sexual Abuse in Jamaica-HBK2.pdf
title_short Representations of Child Sexual Abuse in Jamaica-HBK2.pdf
title_full Representations of Child Sexual Abuse in Jamaica-HBK2.pdf
title_fullStr Representations of Child Sexual Abuse in Jamaica-HBK2.pdf
title_full_unstemmed Representations of Child Sexual Abuse in Jamaica-HBK2.pdf
title_sort representations of child sexual abuse in jamaica-hbk2.pdf
publisher MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2022
url https://www.mdpi.com/books/mono/5902
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