Indigeneity matters: Portrayal of women offenders in New Zealand newspapers

Author:

Deckert Antje1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand

Abstract

A growing body of research investigates women’s experiences within New Zealand’s criminal justice system, and several studies have addressed the misrepresentation of crime’s reality in news media. However, the discriminatory depiction of Indigenous women offenders in New Zealand’s press has yet to receive scholarly attention. Indigeneity and gender are both critical factors because Māori women constitute the fastest growing segment of New Zealand’s prison population, and media discourses help shape public consent to penal policies. To address this research gap, New Zealand newspaper articles featuring women offenders were collected over a 2-year period (2016–2018) and analysed for their use of neutralization and exacerbation techniques. The findings reveal that New Zealand newspapers distort our understanding of who is most affected by the criminal justice system and what crimes Pākehā1 and Māori women typically commit. Most importantly, stories about Pākehā women were more likely to use a favourable tone (56.5%), while stories about Māori women were more likely to take on an unfavourable tone (83.3%). Finally, motherhood, as an additional exacerbating factor, was mentioned nearly twice as often for Māori women. This article adds to the body of knowledge on the portrayal of Māori people in the media, linking it to public consent to governmental policies.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Law,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Communication,Cultural Studies

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1. ‘You made us feel at home’: towards Indigenous feminist methodologies with young wāhine in sport and exercise;Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise and Health;2023-08-30

2. Māori, Policing, and Mass Media Narratives in Aotearoa New Zealand;Palgrave Studies in Crime, Media and Culture;2023

3. When Victims Look like Criminals: Rehumanizing Victim Representation in Serial Killer Cases;Journal of Canadian Studies;2022-11-01

4. Covering tangata whenua in Aotearoa: a big data exploration of print media and Māori;Kōtuitui: New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences Online;2022-09-18

5. Prison and Community Penalties;Gender, Crime and Justice;2021-11-16

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