Reforms and Media Depictions of the Death Penalty in Malaysia

Author:

Singh Darshan1,Griffin O. Hayden2ORCID,Webb Megan3,Narayanan Suresh4,Leban Lindsay2

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Drug Research, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Minden, Malaysia

2. Department of Criminal Justice, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA

3. Department of Sociology, University of California, Riverside, Riverside, CA, USA

4. School of Social Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Minden, Malaysia

Abstract

Malaysia has retained the death penalty for violent crimes and some nonviolent drug offenses. Major news dailies, controlled by political parties in the ruling coalition, have helped justify this stance in the past. This situation changed over 22 months when a new coalition, which campaigned on abolishing capital punishment, took office and sparked renewed public discussion on this issue. Depictions of the death penalty debate were analyzed by conducting a content analysis of two major English-language newspapers, The Star and New Straits Times. Our findings suggest that The Star provided more international coverage and the New Straits Times prioritized domestic coverage. While both outlets provided comprehensive, and sometimes, critical coverage of executions elsewhere, they downplayed the fact that Malaysia engages in the same practice. There was no evidence to indicate that they were pushing an agenda as neither took a formal position on the issue. Content to transmit the differing views on the subject, neither functioned as forums to air nor shaped policy positions. This posture was possibly shaped by preconceived notions of what their readership wants and/or self-censorship—a legacy of past subjugation that will hopefully change when press freedom is perceived as a right, not a privilege.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Law

Reference58 articles.

1. Abdul Rashid H. R. (2018, October 16). Death penalty abolishment won't diminish the severity of punishment. New Straits Times. https://www.nst.com.my/news/nation/2018/10/421820/death-penalty-abolishment-wont-diminish-severity-punishment

2. AIPA. (2019). Malaysia Country Report on Drug Issues 2019. https://www.parliament.go.th/ewtadmin/ewt/aipa2019/download/article/AIPACODD/Annex%20M%20-%20Country%20Report%20of%20Malaysia.pdf

3. Amnesty International. (2023a). Malaysia: Death Penalty Abolition. https://www.amnesty.my/abolish-death-penalty/

4. Amnesty International. (2023b) A Brief History of the Death Penalty in Malaysia. https://www.amnesty.my/abolish-death-penalty/a-brief-history-of-the-death-penalty-in-malaysia/

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