Kids and crime: A comparative study of youth coverage in japan and the united states

Journal of Mass Media Ethics 22 (1):3 – 17 (2007)
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Abstract

This pilot study examines how a number of American and Japanese journalists make the tough calls regarding an escalating social problem: whether to identify juveniles who have been charged with serious capital crimes. Divergent societal and journalistic values of the two countries are explored via a survey of journalists from Honolulu and Hiroshima. Newsroom policies and practices are described regarding general and specific cases of juvenile crime. In general, Japanese journalists are far more likely than U.S. journalists to withhold names. Tables and additional background information are found at jmme.org.

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