NCJ Number
192096
Date Published
2001
Length
38 pages
Annotation
This article examines the ideological role of the mass media, the social construction of reality, and the social construction of consensus.
Abstract
The article analyzes the manufacture of a crime wave--focused on the criminality of Albanian economic immigrants--and associates it with a wider climate of "moral panic" manifest in Greek society. It attempts to determine the singularity of the representation of economic immigrants' criminality in the Athens press and how this problem can be related to the social construction of reality, the production of a social consensus, and the legitimization of the mass media's existing power and dominance relations. The article concludes that the selection of what constitutes a news story, how it is to be evaluated, classified, and rated on a daily basis is influenced by each paper's overall philosophy and social perception, which is closely interrelated to the system of representation and interpretation supplied by the dominant ideology. Notes, references