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Moral panic

A moral panic is a widespread feeling of fear, often an irrational one, that some evil person or thing threatens the values, interests, or well-being of a community or society.[1][2][3] It is "the process of arousing social concern over an issue",[4] usually perpetuated by moral entrepreneurs and mass media coverage, and exacerbated by politicians and lawmakers.[1][4] Moral panic can give rise to new laws aimed at controlling the community.[5]

Witch-hunting is a historical example of mass behavior potentially fueled by moral panic. 1555 German print.

Stanley Cohen, who developed the term, states that moral panic happens when "a condition, episode, person or group of persons emerges to become defined as a threat to societal values and interests".[6] While the issues identified may be real, the claims "exaggerate the seriousness, extent, typicality and/or inevitability of harm".[7] Moral panics are now studied in sociology and criminology, media studies, and cultural studies.[2][8]

Examples of moral panic include the belief in widespread abduction of children by predatory pedophiles;[9][10][11] belief in ritual abuse of women and children by Satanic cults;[12] and concerns over the effects of music lyrics.[13] Some moral panics can become embedded in standard political discourse,[2] which include concepts such as the "Red Scare"[14] and terrorism.[15]

It differs from mass hysteria, which is closer to a psychological illness rather than a sociological phenomenon.[16]

History and development edit

Though the term moral panic was used in 1830 by a religious magazine regarding a sermon,[17][18] it was used in a way that completely differs from its modern social science application. The phrase was used again in 1831, with an intent that is possibly closer to its modern use.[19]

Though not using the term moral panic, Marshall McLuhan, in his 1964 book Understanding Media,[20] articulated the concept academically in describing the effects of media.

As a social theory or sociological concept, the concept was first developed in the United Kingdom by Stanley Cohen, who introduced the phrase moral panic in a 1967–1969 PhD thesis that became the basis for his 1972 book Folk Devils and Moral Panics.[21] In the book, Cohen describes the reaction among the British public to the rivalry between the "mod" and "rocker" youth subcultures of the 1960s and 1970s. Cohen's initial development of the concept was for the purpose of analyzing the definition of and social reaction to these subcultures as a social problem.[1][8][22]

According to Cohen, a moral panic occurs when a "condition, episode, person or group of persons emerges to become defined as a threat to societal values and interests."[6] To Cohen, those who start the panic after fearing a threat to prevailing social or cultural values are 'moral entrepreneurs', while those who supposedly threaten social order have been described as 'folk devils'.

In the early 1990s, Erich Goode and Nachman Ben-Yehuda produced an "attributional" model that placed more emphasis on strict definition than cultural processes.[12][8]

Differences in British and American definitions edit

Many sociologists have pointed out the differences between definitions of a moral panic as described by American versus British sociologists.[citation needed] Kenneth Thompson claimed that American sociologists tended to emphasize psychological factors, while the British portrayed "moral panics" as crises of capitalism.[23][24]

British criminologist Jock Young used the term in his participant observation study of drug consumption in Porthmadog, Wales, between 1967 and 1969.[25] In Policing the Crisis: Mugging, the State and Law and Order (1978),[26] Marxist Stuart Hall and his colleagues studied the public reaction to the phenomenon of mugging and the perception that it had recently been imported from American culture into the UK. Employing Cohen's definition of moral panic, Hall and colleagues theorized that the "rising crime rate equation" performs an ideological function relating to social control. Crime statistics, in Hall's view, are often manipulated for political and economic purposes; moral panics could thereby be ignited to create public support for the need to "police the crisis".[26]

Cohen's model of moral panic edit

Folk Devils and Moral Panics
AuthorStanley Cohen
Published
  • 1972 (1st ed., MacGibbon and Kee)
  • 1980 (2nd ed., Basil Blackwood)
  • 2002 (3rd ed., Routledge)

First to name the phenomenon, Stanley Cohen investigated a series of "moral panics" in his 1972 book Folk Devils and Moral Panics.[7] In the book, Cohen describes the reaction among the British public to the seaside rivalry between the "mod" and "rocker" youth subcultures of the 1960s and 1970s. In a moral panic, Cohen says, "the untypical is made typical".[7]

Cohen's initial development of the concept was for the purpose of analyzing the definition of and social reaction to these subcultures as a social problem. He was interested in demonstrating how agents of social control amplified deviance, in that they potentially damaged the identities of those labeled as "deviant" and invited them to embrace deviant identities and behavior.[8] According to Cohen, these groups were labelled as being outside the central core values of consensual society and as posing a threat to both the values of society and society itself, hence the term "folk devils".[27]

Setting out to test his hypotheses on mods and rockers, Cohen ended up in a rather different place: he discovered a pattern of construction and reaction with greater foothold than mods and rockers – the moral panic. He thereby identified five sequential stages of moral panic.[28]

Characterizing the reactions to the mod and rocker conflict, he identified four key agents in moral panics: mass media, moral entrepreneurs, the culture of social control, and the public.[1][8][22]

In a more recent edition of Folk Devils and Moral Panics, Cohen suggested that the term "panic" in itself connotes irrationality and a lack of control. Cohen maintained that "panic" is a suitable term when used as an extended metaphor.[7]

Cohen's stages of moral panic edit

Setting out to test his hypotheses on mods and rockers, Cohen discovered a pattern of construction and reaction with greater foothold than mods and rockers – the moral panic.[28]

According to Cohen, there are five sequential stages in the construction of a moral panic:[1][7][22]

  1. An event, condition, episode, person, or group of persons is perceived and defined as a threat to societal values, safety, and interests.
  2. The nature of these apparent threats are amplified by the mass media, who present the supposed threat through simplistic, symbolic rhetoric. Such portrayals appeal to public prejudices, creating an evil in need of social control (folk devils) and victims (the moral majority).
  3. A sense of social anxiety and concern among the public is aroused through these symbolic representations of the threat.
  4. The gatekeepers of morality – editors, religious leaders, politicians, and other "moral"-thinking people – respond to the threat, with socially-accredited experts pronouncing their diagnoses and solutions to the "threat". This includes new laws or policies.
  5. The condition then disappears, submerges or deteriorates and becomes more visible.

Cohen observed further:[28]

Sometimes the object of the panic is quite novel and at other times it is something which has been in existence long enough, but suddenly appears in the limelight. Sometimes the panic passes over and is forgotten, except in folk-lore and collective memory; at other times it has more serious and long-lasting repercussions and might produce such changes as those in legal and social policy or even in the way the society conceives itself.

Agents of moral panic edit

Characterizing the reactions to the mod and rocker conflict, Cohen identified four key agents in moral panics: mass media, moral entrepreneurs, the culture of social control, and the public.[1][8][22]

  • Media – especially key in the early stage of social reaction, producing "processed or coded images" of deviance and the deviants.[29] This involves three processes:[8]
    1. exaggeration and distortion of who did or said what;
    2. prediction, the dire consequences of failure to act;
    3. symbolization, signifying a person, word, or thing as a threat.
  • Moral entrepreneurs – individuals and groups who target deviant behavior
  • Societal control culture – comprises those with institutional power: the police, the courts, and local and national politicians. They are made aware of the nature and extent of the 'threat'; concern is passed up the chain of command to the national level, where control measures are instituted.
  • The public – these include individuals and groups. They have to decide who and what to believe: in the mod and rocker case, the public initially distrusted media messages, but ultimately believed them.

Mass media edit

The concept of "moral panic" has also been linked to certain assumptions about the mass media.[7] In recent times, the mass media have become important players in the dissemination of moral indignation, even when they do not appear to be consciously engaged in sensationalism or in muckraking. Simply reporting a subset of factual statements without contextual nuance can be enough to generate concern, anxiety, or panic.[7]

Cohen stated that the mass media is the primary source of the public's knowledge about deviance and social problems. He further argued that moral panic gives rise to the folk devil by labelling actions and people.[7] Christian Joppke, furthers the importance of media as he notes, shifts in public attention "can trigger the decline of movements and fuel the rise of others."[30]

According to Cohen, the media appear in any or all three roles in moral panic dramas:[7]

  • Setting the agenda – selecting deviant or socially problematic events deemed as newsworthy, then using finer filters to select which events are candidates for moral panic.
  • Transmitting the images – transmitting the claims by using the rhetoric of moral panics.
  • Breaking the silence and making the claim.

Goode and Ben-Yehuda’s attributional model edit

In their 1994 book Moral Panics: The Social Construction of Deviance,[12] Erich Goode and Nachman Ben-Yehuda take a social constructionist approach to moral panics, challenging the assumption that sociology is able to define, measure, explain, and ameliorate social problems.[8]

Reviewing empirical studies in the social constructionist perspective, Goode and Ben-Yehuda produced an "attributional" model that identifies essential characteristics and placed more emphasis on strict definition than cultural processes.[3][8][12] They arrived at five defining "elements", or "criteria", of a moral panic:[31]

  1. Concern – there is "heightened level of concern over the behaviour of a certain group or category" and its consequences; in other words, there is the belief that the behavior of the group or activity deemed deviant is likely to have a negative effect on society. Concern can be indicated via opinion polls, media coverage, and lobbying activity.[31]
  2. Hostility – there is "an increased level of hostility" toward the deviants, who are "collectively designated as the enemy, or an enemy, of respectable society". These deviants are constructed as "folk devils", and a clear division forms between "them" and "us".[32]
  3. Consensus – "there must be at least a certain minimal measure of consensus" across society as a whole, or at least "designated segments" of it, that "the threat is real, serious and caused by the wrongdoing group members and their behaviour". This is to say, though concern does not have to be nationwide, there must be widespread acceptance that the group in question poses a very real threat to society. It is important at this stage that the "moral entrepreneurs" are vocal and the "folk devils" appear weak and disorganized.[32]
  4. Disproportionality – "public concern is in excess of what is appropriate if concern were directly proportional to objective harm". More simply, the action taken is disproportionate to the actual threat posed by the accused group. According to Goode and Ben-Yehuda, "the concept of moral panic rests on disproportion".[33] As such, statistics are exaggerated or fabricated, and the existence of other equally or more harmful activity is denied.
  5. Volatility – moral panics are highly volatile and tend to disappear as quickly as they appeared because public interest wanes or news reports change to another narrative.

Goode and Ben-Yehuda also examined three competing explanations of moral panics:[8][34]

  1. the grass-roots model – the source of panic is identified as widespread anxieties about real or imagined threats.
  2. the elite-engineered model – an elite group induces, or engineers, a panic over an issue that they know to be exaggerated in order to move attention away from their own lack of solving social problems.
  3. the interest group theory – "the middle rungs of power and status" are where moral issues are most significantly felt.

Similarly, writing about the Blue Whale Challenge and the Momo Challenge as examples of moral panics, Benjamin Radford listed themes that he commonly observed in modern versions of these phenomena:[35]

  • Hidden dangers of modern technology.
  • Evil stranger manipulating the innocent.
  • A "hidden world" of anonymous evil people.

Topic clusters edit

In over 40 years of extensive study, researchers have identified several general clusters of topics that help describe the way in which moral panics operate and the impact they have.[7][8] Some of the more common clusters identified are: child abuse, drugs and alcohol, immigration, media technologies, and street crime.

Child abuse edit

Exceptional cases of physical or sexual abuse against children have driven policies based on child protection, regardless of their frequency or contradicting evidence from experts. While discoveries about pedophilia in the priesthood and among celebrities has somewhat altered the original notion of pedophiles being complete strangers, their presence in and around the family is hardly acknowledged.[36][37]

Alcohol and other drugs edit

Substances used for pleasure such as alcohol and other drugs are popularly subject to legal action and criminalization due to their alleged harms to the health of those who partake in them or general order on the streets. Recent examples include methamphetamine, mephedrone, and designer drugs.[8]

Immigration edit

A series of moral panic is likely to recur whenever humans migrate to a foreign location to live alongside the native or indigenous population, particularly if the newcomers are of a different skin color. These immigrants may be accused of: bringing alien cultures and refusing to integrate with the mainstream culture; putting strain on welfare, education, and housing systems; and excessive involvement in crime.[8]

Media technologies edit

The advent of any new medium of communication produces anxieties among those who deem themselves as protectors of childhood and culture. Their fears are often based on a lack of knowledge as to the actual capacities or usage of the medium. Moralizing organizations, such as those motivated by religion, commonly advocate censorship, while parents remain concerned.[8][38][39]

According to media studies professor Kirsten Drotner:[40]

[E]very time a new mass medium has entered the social scene, it has spurred public debates on social and cultural norms, debates that serve to reflect, negotiate and possibly revise these very norms.… In some cases, debate of a new medium brings about – indeed changes into – heated, emotional reactions … what may be defined as a media panic.

Recent manifestations of this kind of development include cyberbullying and sexting.[8]

Street crime edit

A central concern of modern mass media has been interpersonal crime. When new types or patterns of crime emerge, coverage expands considerably, especially when said crime involves increased violence or the use of weapons. Sustaining the idea that crime is out of control, this keeps prevalent the fear of being randomly attacked on the street by violent young men.[8][41]

Examples edit

Researchers have considered a number of historical and current events to meet the criteria set out by Stanley Cohen.

Historic examples edit

Nativist movement and the Know-Nothing Party (1840s–1860s) edit

The brief success of the Know-Nothing Party in the US during the 1850s can be understood as resulting from a moral panic over Irish Catholic immigration dating back to the 1840s, particularly as it related to religion, politics, and jobs.[30] Nativist criticism of immigrants from Catholic nations centered upon the control of the Pope over church members. The concern regarding the social threat led the Know-Nothing Party in the 1856 presidential election to win 21.5% of the vote. The quick decline in political success for the Know Nothing-Party as a result of a decline in concern for the perceived social threat is an indicative feature of the movements situated in Moral Panic.[42]

Red Scare (1919–1920, late 1940s–1950s) edit

During the years 1919 to 1920, followed by the late 1940s to the 1950s, the United States had a moral panic over communism and feared being attacked by the Soviet Union.[43][14][15] In the late 1940s and the 1950s, a period now known as the McCarthy Era, Senator Joseph McCarthy used his power as a senator to conduct a witch hunt for communists he claimed had infiltrated all levels of American society, including Hollywood, the State Department, and the armed forces.[44] When he began, he held little influence or respect within the Senate,[45] but he exploited Americans' fears of communism (and Congress' desire to not lose re-election) to rise to prominence and keep the hunt going in spite of an increasingly apparent lack of evidence, often accusing those who dared oppose him of being communists themselves.[46][47][48]

"The Devil's music" (1920s–1980s) edit

Over the years, there has been concern of various types of new music causing spiritual or otherwise moral corruption to younger generations,[49] often called "the devil's music". While the types of music popularly labeled as such has changed with time, along with the intended meaning of the term, this basic factor of the moral panic has remained constant. It could thus be argued that this is really a series of smaller moral panics that fall under a larger umbrella. While most notable in the United States, other countries such as Romania[50] have seen exposure to or promotion of the idea as well.

Blues was one of the first music genres to receive this label, mainly due to a perception that it incited violence and other poor behavior.[51] In the early 20th century, the blues was considered disreputable, especially as white audiences began listening to the blues during the 1920s.[citation needed]

Jazz was another early receiver of the label. At the time, traditionalists considered jazz to contribute to the breakdown of morality.[52] Despite the veiled attacks on blues and jazz as "negro music" often going hand-in-hand with other attacks on the genres, urban middle-class African Americans perceived jazz as "devil's music", and agreed with the beliefs that jazz's improvised rhythms and sounds were promoting promiscuity.[53]

Some have speculated that the rock phase of the panic in the 1970s and 1980s contributed to the popularity of the satanic ritual abuse moral panic in the 1980s.[49][54]

Switchblades (1950s) edit

In the United States, a 1950 article titled "The Toy That Kills" in the Women's Home Companion,[55] about automatic knives, or "switchblades", sparked significant controversy. It was further fuelled by highly popular films of the late 1950s, including Rebel Without a Cause (1955), Crime in the Streets (1956), 12 Angry Men (1957), The Delinquents, High School Confidential (1958), and the 1957 Broadway musical, West Side Story.[56][57]

Fixation on the switchblade as the symbol of youth violence, sex, and delinquency resulted in demands from the public and Congress to control the sale and possession of such knives.[56][57] State laws restricting or criminalizing switchblade possession and use were adopted by an increasing number of state legislatures, and many of the restrictive laws around them worldwide date back to this period.[citation needed]

Mods and rockers (1960s) edit

In early 1960s Britain, the two main youth subcultures were Mods and Rockers. The "Mods and Rockers" conflict was explored as an instance of moral panic by sociologist Stanley Cohen in his seminal study Folk Devils and Moral Panics,[58] which examined media coverage of the Mod and Rocker riots in the 1960s.[59]

Although Cohen acknowledged that Mods and Rockers engaged in street fighting in the mid-1960s, he argued that they were no different from the evening brawls that occurred between non-Mod and non-Rocker youths throughout the 1950s and early 1960s, both at seaside resorts and after football games.[60]

Dungeons & Dragons (1980s–1990s) edit

At various times, Dungeons & Dragons and other tabletop role-playing games have been accused of promoting such practices as Satanism, witchcraft, suicide, pornography and murder. In the 1980s and later, some groups, especially fundamentalist Christian groups, accused the games of encouraging interest in sorcery and the veneration of demons.[61][62]

Satanic panic (1980s–1990s) edit

The "satanic panic" was a series of moral panics regarding satanic ritual abuse that originated in the United States and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1980s and 1990s, which led to a string of wrongful convictions.[12][63][64][65] The West Memphis Three were three teenagers falsely accused of murdering children in a satanic ritual.[citation needed] Two were sentenced to life in prison and one was sentenced to death, before all being released after 18 years in prison.

HIV/AIDS (1980s–1990s) edit

Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) is a viral illness that may lead to or exacerbate other health conditions such as pneumonia, fungal infections, tuberculosis, toxoplasmosis, and cytomegalovirus. A meeting of the British Sociological Association's South West and Wales Study entitled "AIDS: The Latest Moral Panic" was prompted by the growing interest of medical sociologists in AIDS, as well as that of UK health care professionals working in the field of health education. It took place at a time when both groups were beginning to voice an increased concern with the growing media attention and fear-mongering that AIDS was attracting.[66] In the 1980s, a moral panic was created within the media over HIV/AIDS. For example, in Britain, a prominent advertisement by the government[67] suggested that the public was uninformed about HIV/AIDS due to a lack of publicly accessible and accurate information.[citation needed]

The media outlets nicknamed HIV/AIDS the "gay plague", which further stigmatized the disease. However, scientists gained a far better understanding of HIV/AIDS as it grew in the 1980s and moved into the 1990s and beyond. The illness was still negatively viewed by many as either being caused by or passed on through the gay community. Once it became clear that this was not the case, the moral panic created by the media changed to blaming the overall negligence of ethical standards by the younger generation (both male and female), resulting in another moral panic. Authors behind AIDS: Rights, Risk, and Reason argued that "British TV and press coverage is locked into an agenda which blocks out any approach to the subject which does not conform in advance to the values and language of a profoundly homophobic culture—a culture that does not regard gay men as fully or properly human. No distinction obtains for the agenda between 'quality' and 'tabloid' newspapers, or between 'popular' and 'serious' television."[68]

Similarly, reports of a group of AIDS cases amongst gay men in Southern California which suggested that a sexually transmitted infectious agent might be the etiological agent[69] led to several terms relating to homosexuality being coined for the disease, including "gay plague".[70]

Dangerous dogs (late 1980s–early 1990s) edit

After a series of high-profile dog attacks on children in the United Kingdom, the British press began to engage in a campaign against so-called dangerous dog breeds, especially Pit Bulls and Rottweilers, which bore all the hallmarks of a moral panic.[71][72][73]

This media pressure led the government to hastily introduce the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 which has been criticised as "among the worst pieces of legislation ever seen, a poorly thought-out knee-jerk reaction to tabloid headlines that was rushed through Parliament without proper scrutiny."[74] The act specifically focused on Pit Bulls, which were associated with the lower social strata of British society, rather than the Rottweilers and Dobermann Pinschers generally owned by richer social groups. Critics have identified the presence of social class as a factor in the dangerous dogs moral panic, with establishment anxieties about the "sub-proletarian" sector of British society displaced onto the folk devil of the "Dangerous dog".[72][73]

Ongoing historic examples edit

Increase in crime (1970s–present) edit

Research shows that fear of increasing crime rates is often the cause of moral panics.[7][26][75][76] Recent studies have shown that despite declining crime rates, this phenomenon, which often taps into a population's "herd mentality", continues to occur in various cultures. Japanese jurist Koichi Hamai explains how the changes in crime recording in Japan since the 1990s caused people to believe that the crime rate was rising and that crimes were getting increasingly severe.[77]

Violence and video games (1970s–present) edit

There have been calls to regulate violence in video games for nearly as long as the video game industry has existed, with Death Race being a notable early example.[78][79] In the 1990s, improvements in video game technology allowed for more lifelike depictions of violence in games such as Mortal Kombat and Doom. The industry attracted controversy over violent content and concerns about effects they might have on players, generating frequent media stories that attempted to associate video games with violent behavior, in addition to a number of academic studies that reported conflicting findings about the strength of correlations.[78] According to Christopher Ferguson, sensationalist media reports and the scientific community unintentionally worked together in "promoting an unreasonable fear of violent video games".[80] Concerns from parts of the public about violent games led to cautionary, often exaggerated news stories, warnings from politicians and other public figures, and calls for research to prove the connection, which in turn led to studies "speaking beyond the available data and allowing the promulgation of extreme claims without the usual scientific caution and skepticism".[80]

Since the 1990s, there have been attempts to regulate violent video games in the United States through congressional bills as well as within the industry.[78] Public concern and media coverage of violent video games reached a high point following the Columbine High School massacre in 1999, after which videos were found of the perpetrators, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, talking about violent games like Doom and making comparisons between the acts they intended to carry out and aspects of games.[78][80]

Ferguson and others have explained the video game moral panic as part of a cycle that all new media go through.[80][81][82] In 2011, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association that legally restricting sales of video games to minors would be unconstitutional and deemed the research presented in favour of regulation, as "unpersuasive".[80]

War on drugs (1970s–present) edit

Some critics have pointed to moral panic as an explanation for the War on Drugs. For example, a Royal Society of Arts commission concluded that "the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 ... is driven more by 'moral panic' than by a practical desire to reduce harm".[83]

Some have written that one of the many rungs supporting the moral panic behind the War on Drugs was a separate but related moral panic, which peaked in the late 1990s, involving media's gross exaggeration of the frequency of the surreptitious use of date rape drugs.[84][75][85] News media have been criticized for advocating "grossly excessive protective measures for women, particularly in coverage between 1996 and 1998", for overstating the threat and for excessively dwelling on the topic.[75] For example, a 2009 Australian study found that drug panel tests were unable to detect any drug in any of the 97 instances of patients admitted to the hospital believing their drinks might have been spiked.[86]

Sex offenders, child sexual abuse, and pedophilia (1970s–present) edit

The media narrative of a sex offender, highlighting egregious offenses as typical behaviour of any sex offender, and media distorting the facts of some cases,[87] has led legislators to attack judicial discretion,[87] making sex offender registration mandatory based on certain listed offenses rather than individual risk or the actual severity of the crime, thus practically catching less serious offenders under the domain of harsh sex offender laws. In the 1990s and 2000s, there have been instances of moral panics in the United Kingdom and the United States, related to colloquial uses of the term pedophilia to refer to such unusual crimes as high-profile cases of child abduction.[63]

The moral panic over pedophilia began in the 1970s after the sexual revolution. While homosexuality was becoming more socially accepted after the sexual revolution, pro-contact pedophiles believed that the sexual revolution never helped pro-contact pedophiles.[88] In the 1970s, pro-contact pedophile activist organizations such as Paedophile Information Exchange (PIE) and North American Man/Boy Love Association (NAMBLA) were formed in October 1974 and December 1978, respectively. Despite receiving some support, PIE received much backlash when they advocated for abolishing or lowering age of consent laws. As a result, people protested against PIE.[89]

Until the first half of the 1970s, sex was not yet part of the concept of domestic child abuse, which used to be limited to physical abuse and neglect.[90] The sexual part of child abuse became prominent in the United States due to the encounter of two political agendas: the fight against battered child syndrome by pediatricians during the 1960s and the feminist anti-rape movement, in particular the denunciation of domestic sexual violence.[90] These two movements overlapped in 1975, creating a new political agenda about child sexual abuse. Laura Lowenkron wrote: "The strong political and emotional appeal of the theme of 'child sexual abuse' strengthened the feminist criticism of the patriarchal family structure, according to which domestic violence is linked to the unequal power between men and women and between adults and children."[90] Although the concern over child sexual abuse was caused by feminists, the concern over child sexual abuse also attracted traditional groups and conservative groups. Lowenkron added: "Concerned about the increasing expansion and acceptance of so-called 'sexual deviations' during what was called the libertarian age from the 1960s to the early 1970s", conservative groups and traditional groups "saw in the fight against 'child sexual abuse' the chance" to "revive fears about crime and sexual dangers".[90]

In the 1980s, the media began to report more frequently on cases of children being raped, kidnapped, or murdered, leading to the moral panic over sex offenders and pedophiles becoming very intense in the early 1980s. In 1981, for instance, a six-year-old boy named Adam Walsh was abducted, murdered, and beheaded. Investigators believe the murderer was serial killer Ottis Toole. The murder of Adam Walsh took over nationwide news and led to a moral panic over child abduction, followed by the creation of new laws for missing children.[91] According to criminologist Richard Moran, the Walsh case "created a nation of petrified kids and paranoid parents ... Kids used to be able to go out and organize a stickball game, and now all playdates and the social lives of children are arranged and controlled by the parents."[91]

Also during the 1980s, inaccurate and heavily flawed data about sex offenders and their recidivism rates was published. This data led to the public believing sex offenders to have a particularly high recidivism rate; this in turn led to the creation of sex offender registries.[92] Later information revealed that sex offenders, including child sex offenders, have a low recidivism rate.[92][93][94][95][96] Other highly publicized cases, similar to the murder of Adam Walsh, that contributed to the creation of sex offender registries and sex offender laws include the abduction and murder of 11-year-old boy Jacob Wetterling in 1989; the rape and murder of 7-year-old girl Megan Kanka in 1994; and the rape and murder of 9-year-old girl Jessica Lunsford in 2005.[92]

Another contributing factor in the moral panic over pedophiles and sex offenders was the day-care sex-abuse hysteria in the 1980s and early 1990s, including the McMartin preschool trial. This led to a panic where parents became hypervigilant with concerns of predatory child sex offenders seeking to abduct children in public spaces, such as playgrounds.[97]

Contemporary examples edit

Human trafficking (2000–present) edit

Many critics of contemporary anti-prostitution activism argue that much of the current concern about human trafficking and its more general conflation with prostitution and other forms of sex work have hallmarks of moral panic. They further argue that this moral panic shares much in common with the 'white slavery' panic of a century earlier, which in the US prompted passage of the 1910 Mann Act.[98][99][100][101] Nick Davies argues that the following major factors contributed towards this effect. Since the collapse of Communism, Western Europe was flooded with sex workers from Eastern Europe, and the term "sex trafficking" came to mean any organized movement of sex workers, losing the connotation of force and coercion. This change of the definition entered, e.g., into the UK's Sexual Offences Act 2003. Second, academic researchers on sex trade provided a range of estimates of the trafficked persons, including estimates based on various assumptions, up to the very pessimistic ones. The media picked the most alarmist numbers, which were uncritically used by politicians, who in their turn were quoted for further misleading information.[102]

Terrorism and Islamic extremism (2001–present) edit

After the September 11 attacks in 2001, some scholars identified a rising fear of Muslims in the western world, which they described as a moral panic.[103][15][104] This exaggeration of the threat posed by Islam served a political purpose, contributing to the concept of a global war on terror, including the war in Afghanistan and a war in Iraq.[15][105]

Following the September 11 attacks, there was a dramatic increase in hate crimes against Muslims and Arabs in the United States, with rates peaking in 2001 and later surpassed in 2016.[15][106]

QAnon conspiracies (2020s) edit

QAnon, a late-2010s to early 2020s far-right conspiracy theory that began on 4chan and which alleged that a secret cabal of Jewish, Satan-worshipping, cannibalistic pedophiles is running a global child sex-trafficking ring, has been described as a moral panic and compared to the 1980s panic over satanic ritual abuse.[107]

LGBT grooming conspiracy theory (2020s–present) edit

Since the early 2020s, members of the far-right and a growing number of mainstream conservatives, mostly in the United States, have falsely accused LGBT people, as well as their allies and progressives in general, of systematically using LGBT-positive education and campaigns for LGBT rights as a method of child grooming.[108] These accusations and conspiracy theories are characterized by experts as baseless, homophobic and transphobic, and as examples of moral panic.[109][110][111][112]

Criticism of moral panic as an explanation edit

Paul Joosse has argued that while classic moral panic theory styled itself as being part of the "sceptical revolution" that sought to critique structural functionalism, it is actually very similar to Émile Durkheim's depiction of how the collective conscience is strengthened through its reactions to deviance (in Cohen's case, for example, "right-thinkers" use folk devils to strengthen societal orthodoxies). In his analysis of Donald Trump's victory in the 2016 United States presidential election, Joosse reimagined moral panic in Weberian terms, showing how charismatic moral entrepreneurs can at once deride folk devils in the traditional sense while avoiding the conservative moral recapitulation that classic moral panic theory predicts.[113] Another criticism is that of disproportionality: there is no way to measure what a proportionate reaction should be to a specific action.[114]

Writing in 1995 about the moral panic that arose in the UK after a series of murders by juveniles, chiefly that of two-year-old James Bulger by two 10-year-old boys but also including that of 70-year-old Edna Phillips by two 17-year-old girls, the sociologist Colin Hay pointed out that the folk devil was ambiguous in such cases; the child perpetrators would normally be thought of as innocent.[115]

In 1995, Angela McRobbie and Sarah Thornton argued "that it is now time that every stage in the process of constructing a moral panic, as well as the social relations which support it, should be revised". Their argument is that mass media has changed since the concept of moral panic emerged so "that 'folk devils' are less marginalized than they once were", and that "folk devils" are not only castigated by mass media but supported and defended by it as well. They also suggest that the "points of social control" that moral panics used to rest on "have undergone some degree of shift, if not transformation".[116]

British criminologist Yvonne Jewkes (2004) has also raised issue with the term "morality", how it is accepted unproblematically in the concept of "moral panic" and how most research into moral panics fails to approach the term critically but instead accepts it at face value.[41] Jewkes goes on to argue that the thesis and the way it has been used fails to distinguish between crimes that quite rightly offend human morality, and thus elicit a justifiable reaction, and those that demonise minorities. The public are not sufficiently gullible to keep accepting the latter and consequently allow themselves to be manipulated by the media and the government.[41]

Another British criminologist, Steve Hall (2012), goes a step further to suggest that the term "moral panic" is a fundamental category error. Hall argues that although some crimes are sensationalized by the media, in the general structure of the crime/control narrative the ability of the existing state and criminal justice system to protect the public is also overstated. Public concern is whipped up only for the purpose of being soothed, which produces not panic but the opposite, comfort and complacency.[117]

Echoing another point Hall makes, sociologists Thompson and Williams (2013) argue that the concept of "moral panic" is not a rational response to the phenomenon of social reaction, but itself a product of the irrational middle-class fear of the imagined working-class "mob". Using as an example a peaceful and lawful protest staged by local mothers against the re-housing of sex-offenders on their estate, Thompson and Williams argue that the sensationalist demonization of the protesters by moral panic theorists and the liberal press was just as irrational as the demonization of the sex offenders by the protesters and the tabloid press.[118]

Many sociologists and criminologists (Ungar, Hier, Rohloff)[full citation needed] have revised Cohen's original framework. The revisions are compatible with the way in which Cohen theorizes panics in the third Introduction to Folk Devils and Moral Panics.[119]

See also edit

References edit

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Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Barron, Christie; Lacombe, Dany (2008). "Moral Panic and the Nasty Girl". Canadian Review of Sociology. 42: 51–69. doi:10.1111/j.1755-618X.2005.tb00790.x.
  • Ben-Yehuda, Nachman (1986). "The Sociology of Moral Panics: Toward a New Synthesis". The Sociological Quarterly. 27 (4): 495–513. doi:10.1111/j.1533-8525.1986.tb00274.x.
  • Boëthius, Ulf (1995), "Youth, the media and moral panics", in Fornäs, Johan; Bolin, Göran (eds.), Youth culture in late modernity, London & Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE, pp. 39–57, ISBN 978-0803988996.
  • Colomb, Wendy; Damphousse, Kelly (2004). "Examination of newspaper coverage of Hate Crimes: A moral panic perspective". American Journal of Criminal Justice. 28 (2): 147. doi:10.1007/BF02885869. S2CID 145519152.
  • Cree, Viviene E.; Clapton, Gary; Smith, Mark (2015). Revisiting moral panics. Bristol, UK; Chicago: Policy Press. ISBN 978-1447321859.
  • Critcher, Chas (2008). "Moral Panic Analysis: Past, Present and Future". Sociology Compass. 2 (4): 1127–1144. doi:10.1111/j.1751-9020.2008.00122.x.
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  • Weitzer, Ronald (2009). "Legalizing Prostitution: Morality Politics in Western Australia". British Journal of Criminology. 49 (1): 88–105. doi:10.1093/bjc/azn027. JSTOR 23639657. SSRN 1315132.
  • Woodiwiss, Michael; Hobbs, Dick (2009). "Organized Evil and the Atlantic Alliance: Moral Panics and the Rhetoric of Organized Crime Policing in America and Britain". British Journal of Criminology. 49 (1): 106–128. doi:10.1093/bjc/azn054. JSTOR 23639658. SSRN 1315134.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Moral panic at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Moral panic at Wikiquote
  •   The dictionary definition of moral panic at Wiktionary

moral, panic, album, moral, panic, album, moral, panic, widespread, feeling, fear, often, irrational, that, some, evil, person, thing, threatens, values, interests, well, being, community, society, process, arousing, social, concern, over, issue, usually, perp. For the album see Moral Panic album A moral panic is a widespread feeling of fear often an irrational one that some evil person or thing threatens the values interests or well being of a community or society 1 2 3 It is the process of arousing social concern over an issue 4 usually perpetuated by moral entrepreneurs and mass media coverage and exacerbated by politicians and lawmakers 1 4 Moral panic can give rise to new laws aimed at controlling the community 5 Witch hunting is a historical example of mass behavior potentially fueled by moral panic 1555 German print Stanley Cohen who developed the term states that moral panic happens when a condition episode person or group of persons emerges to become defined as a threat to societal values and interests 6 While the issues identified may be real the claims exaggerate the seriousness extent typicality and or inevitability of harm 7 Moral panics are now studied in sociology and criminology media studies and cultural studies 2 8 Examples of moral panic include the belief in widespread abduction of children by predatory pedophiles 9 10 11 belief in ritual abuse of women and children by Satanic cults 12 and concerns over the effects of music lyrics 13 Some moral panics can become embedded in standard political discourse 2 which include concepts such as the Red Scare 14 and terrorism 15 It differs from mass hysteria which is closer to a psychological illness rather than a sociological phenomenon 16 Contents 1 History and development 1 1 Differences in British and American definitions 2 Cohen s model of moral panic 2 1 Cohen s stages of moral panic 2 2 Agents of moral panic 3 Mass media 4 Goode and Ben Yehuda s attributional model 5 Topic clusters 5 1 Child abuse 5 2 Alcohol and other drugs 5 3 Immigration 5 4 Media technologies 5 5 Street crime 6 Examples 6 1 Historic examples 6 1 1 Nativist movement and the Know Nothing Party 1840s 1860s 6 1 2 Red Scare 1919 1920 late 1940s 1950s 6 1 3 The Devil s music 1920s 1980s 6 1 4 Switchblades 1950s 6 1 5 Mods and rockers 1960s 6 1 6 Dungeons amp Dragons 1980s 1990s 6 1 7 Satanic panic 1980s 1990s 6 1 8 HIV AIDS 1980s 1990s 6 1 9 Dangerous dogs late 1980s early 1990s 6 2 Ongoing historic examples 6 2 1 Increase in crime 1970s present 6 2 2 Violence and video games 1970s present 6 2 3 War on drugs 1970s present 6 2 4 Sex offenders child sexual abuse and pedophilia 1970s present 6 3 Contemporary examples 6 3 1 Human trafficking 2000 present 6 3 2 Terrorism and Islamic extremism 2001 present 6 3 3 QAnon conspiracies 2020s 6 3 4 LGBT grooming conspiracy theory 2020s present 7 Criticism of moral panic as an explanation 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory and development editThough the term moral panic was used in 1830 by a religious magazine regarding a sermon 17 18 it was used in a way that completely differs from its modern social science application The phrase was used again in 1831 with an intent that is possibly closer to its modern use 19 Though not using the term moral panic Marshall McLuhan in his 1964 book Understanding Media 20 articulated the concept academically in describing the effects of media As a social theory or sociological concept the concept was first developed in the United Kingdom by Stanley Cohen who introduced the phrase moral panic in a 1967 1969 PhD thesis that became the basis for his 1972 book Folk Devils and Moral Panics 21 In the book Cohen describes the reaction among the British public to the rivalry between the mod and rocker youth subcultures of the 1960s and 1970s Cohen s initial development of the concept was for the purpose of analyzing the definition of and social reaction to these subcultures as a social problem 1 8 22 According to Cohen a moral panic occurs when a condition episode person or group of persons emerges to become defined as a threat to societal values and interests 6 To Cohen those who start the panic after fearing a threat to prevailing social or cultural values are moral entrepreneurs while those who supposedly threaten social order have been described as folk devils In the early 1990s Erich Goode and Nachman Ben Yehuda produced an attributional model that placed more emphasis on strict definition than cultural processes 12 8 Differences in British and American definitions edit Many sociologists have pointed out the differences between definitions of a moral panic as described by American versus British sociologists citation needed Kenneth Thompson claimed that American sociologists tended to emphasize psychological factors while the British portrayed moral panics as crises of capitalism 23 24 British criminologist Jock Young used the term in his participant observation study of drug consumption in Porthmadog Wales between 1967 and 1969 25 In Policing the Crisis Mugging the State and Law and Order 1978 26 Marxist Stuart Hall and his colleagues studied the public reaction to the phenomenon of mugging and the perception that it had recently been imported from American culture into the UK Employing Cohen s definition of moral panic Hall and colleagues theorized that the rising crime rate equation performs an ideological function relating to social control Crime statistics in Hall s view are often manipulated for political and economic purposes moral panics could thereby be ignited to create public support for the need to police the crisis 26 Cohen s model of moral panic editFolk Devils and Moral PanicsAuthorStanley CohenPublished1972 1st ed MacGibbon and Kee 1980 2nd ed Basil Blackwood 2002 3rd ed Routledge First to name the phenomenon Stanley Cohen investigated a series of moral panics in his 1972 book Folk Devils and Moral Panics 7 In the book Cohen describes the reaction among the British public to the seaside rivalry between the mod and rocker youth subcultures of the 1960s and 1970s In a moral panic Cohen says the untypical is made typical 7 Cohen s initial development of the concept was for the purpose of analyzing the definition of and social reaction to these subcultures as a social problem He was interested in demonstrating how agents of social control amplified deviance in that they potentially damaged the identities of those labeled as deviant and invited them to embrace deviant identities and behavior 8 According to Cohen these groups were labelled as being outside the central core values of consensual society and as posing a threat to both the values of society and society itself hence the term folk devils 27 Setting out to test his hypotheses on mods and rockers Cohen ended up in a rather different place he discovered a pattern of construction and reaction with greater foothold than mods and rockers the moral panic He thereby identified five sequential stages of moral panic 28 Characterizing the reactions to the mod and rocker conflict he identified four key agents in moral panics mass media moral entrepreneurs the culture of social control and the public 1 8 22 In a more recent edition of Folk Devils and Moral Panics Cohen suggested that the term panic in itself connotes irrationality and a lack of control Cohen maintained that panic is a suitable term when used as an extended metaphor 7 Cohen s stages of moral panic edit Setting out to test his hypotheses on mods and rockers Cohen discovered a pattern of construction and reaction with greater foothold than mods and rockers the moral panic 28 According to Cohen there are five sequential stages in the construction of a moral panic 1 7 22 An event condition episode person or group of persons is perceived and defined as a threat to societal values safety and interests The nature of these apparent threats are amplified by the mass media who present the supposed threat through simplistic symbolic rhetoric Such portrayals appeal to public prejudices creating an evil in need of social control folk devils and victims the moral majority A sense of social anxiety and concern among the public is aroused through these symbolic representations of the threat The gatekeepers of morality editors religious leaders politicians and other moral thinking people respond to the threat with socially accredited experts pronouncing their diagnoses and solutions to the threat This includes new laws or policies The condition then disappears submerges or deteriorates and becomes more visible Cohen observed further 28 Sometimes the object of the panic is quite novel and at other times it is something which has been in existence long enough but suddenly appears in the limelight Sometimes the panic passes over and is forgotten except in folk lore and collective memory at other times it has more serious and long lasting repercussions and might produce such changes as those in legal and social policy or even in the way the society conceives itself Agents of moral panic edit Characterizing the reactions to the mod and rocker conflict Cohen identified four key agents in moral panics mass media moral entrepreneurs the culture of social control and the public 1 8 22 Media especially key in the early stage of social reaction producing processed or coded images of deviance and the deviants 29 This involves three processes 8 exaggeration and distortion of who did or said what prediction the dire consequences of failure to act symbolization signifying a person word or thing as a threat Moral entrepreneurs individuals and groups who target deviant behavior Societal control culture comprises those with institutional power the police the courts and local and national politicians They are made aware of the nature and extent of the threat concern is passed up the chain of command to the national level where control measures are instituted The public these include individuals and groups They have to decide who and what to believe in the mod and rocker case the public initially distrusted media messages but ultimately believed them Mass media editThe concept of moral panic has also been linked to certain assumptions about the mass media 7 In recent times the mass media have become important players in the dissemination of moral indignation even when they do not appear to be consciously engaged in sensationalism or in muckraking Simply reporting a subset of factual statements without contextual nuance can be enough to generate concern anxiety or panic 7 Cohen stated that the mass media is the primary source of the public s knowledge about deviance and social problems He further argued that moral panic gives rise to the folk devil by labelling actions and people 7 Christian Joppke furthers the importance of media as he notes shifts in public attention can trigger the decline of movements and fuel the rise of others 30 According to Cohen the media appear in any or all three roles in moral panic dramas 7 Setting the agenda selecting deviant or socially problematic events deemed as newsworthy then using finer filters to select which events are candidates for moral panic Transmitting the images transmitting the claims by using the rhetoric of moral panics Breaking the silence and making the claim Goode and Ben Yehuda s attributional model editIn their 1994 book Moral Panics The Social Construction of Deviance 12 Erich Goode and Nachman Ben Yehuda take a social constructionist approach to moral panics challenging the assumption that sociology is able to define measure explain and ameliorate social problems 8 Reviewing empirical studies in the social constructionist perspective Goode and Ben Yehuda produced an attributional model that identifies essential characteristics and placed more emphasis on strict definition than cultural processes 3 8 12 They arrived at five defining elements or criteria of a moral panic 31 Concern there is heightened level of concern over the behaviour of a certain group or category and its consequences in other words there is the belief that the behavior of the group or activity deemed deviant is likely to have a negative effect on society Concern can be indicated via opinion polls media coverage and lobbying activity 31 Hostility there is an increased level of hostility toward the deviants who are collectively designated as the enemy or an enemy of respectable society These deviants are constructed as folk devils and a clear division forms between them and us 32 Consensus there must be at least a certain minimal measure of consensus across society as a whole or at least designated segments of it that the threat is real serious and caused by the wrongdoing group members and their behaviour This is to say though concern does not have to be nationwide there must be widespread acceptance that the group in question poses a very real threat to society It is important at this stage that the moral entrepreneurs are vocal and the folk devils appear weak and disorganized 32 Disproportionality public concern is in excess of what is appropriate if concern were directly proportional to objective harm More simply the action taken is disproportionate to the actual threat posed by the accused group According to Goode and Ben Yehuda the concept of moral panic rests on disproportion 33 As such statistics are exaggerated or fabricated and the existence of other equally or more harmful activity is denied Volatility moral panics are highly volatile and tend to disappear as quickly as they appeared because public interest wanes or news reports change to another narrative Goode and Ben Yehuda also examined three competing explanations of moral panics 8 34 the grass roots model the source of panic is identified as widespread anxieties about real or imagined threats the elite engineered model an elite group induces or engineers a panic over an issue that they know to be exaggerated in order to move attention away from their own lack of solving social problems the interest group theory the middle rungs of power and status are where moral issues are most significantly felt Similarly writing about the Blue Whale Challenge and the Momo Challenge as examples of moral panics Benjamin Radford listed themes that he commonly observed in modern versions of these phenomena 35 Hidden dangers of modern technology Evil stranger manipulating the innocent A hidden world of anonymous evil people Topic clusters editIn over 40 years of extensive study researchers have identified several general clusters of topics that help describe the way in which moral panics operate and the impact they have 7 8 Some of the more common clusters identified are child abuse drugs and alcohol immigration media technologies and street crime Child abuse edit Exceptional cases of physical or sexual abuse against children have driven policies based on child protection regardless of their frequency or contradicting evidence from experts While discoveries about pedophilia in the priesthood and among celebrities has somewhat altered the original notion of pedophiles being complete strangers their presence in and around the family is hardly acknowledged 36 37 Alcohol and other drugs edit Substances used for pleasure such as alcohol and other drugs are popularly subject to legal action and criminalization due to their alleged harms to the health of those who partake in them or general order on the streets Recent examples include methamphetamine mephedrone and designer drugs 8 Immigration edit A series of moral panic is likely to recur whenever humans migrate to a foreign location to live alongside the native or indigenous population particularly if the newcomers are of a different skin color These immigrants may be accused of bringing alien cultures and refusing to integrate with the mainstream culture putting strain on welfare education and housing systems and excessive involvement in crime 8 Media technologies edit Main article Media panic The advent of any new medium of communication produces anxieties among those who deem themselves as protectors of childhood and culture Their fears are often based on a lack of knowledge as to the actual capacities or usage of the medium Moralizing organizations such as those motivated by religion commonly advocate censorship while parents remain concerned 8 38 39 According to media studies professor Kirsten Drotner 40 E very time a new mass medium has entered the social scene it has spurred public debates on social and cultural norms debates that serve to reflect negotiate and possibly revise these very norms In some cases debate of a new medium brings about indeed changes into heated emotional reactions what may be defined as a media panic Recent manifestations of this kind of development include cyberbullying and sexting 8 Street crime edit A central concern of modern mass media has been interpersonal crime When new types or patterns of crime emerge coverage expands considerably especially when said crime involves increased violence or the use of weapons Sustaining the idea that crime is out of control this keeps prevalent the fear of being randomly attacked on the street by violent young men 8 41 Examples editSee also List of mass hysteria cases Researchers have considered a number of historical and current events to meet the criteria set out by Stanley Cohen Historic examples edit Nativist movement and the Know Nothing Party 1840s 1860s edit Main articles Nativism politics and Know Nothing The brief success of the Know Nothing Party in the US during the 1850s can be understood as resulting from a moral panic over Irish Catholic immigration dating back to the 1840s particularly as it related to religion politics and jobs 30 Nativist criticism of immigrants from Catholic nations centered upon the control of the Pope over church members The concern regarding the social threat led the Know Nothing Party in the 1856 presidential election to win 21 5 of the vote The quick decline in political success for the Know Nothing Party as a result of a decline in concern for the perceived social threat is an indicative feature of the movements situated in Moral Panic 42 Red Scare 1919 1920 late 1940s 1950s edit Main articles First Red Scare and Second Red Scare During the years 1919 to 1920 followed by the late 1940s to the 1950s the United States had a moral panic over communism and feared being attacked by the Soviet Union 43 14 15 In the late 1940s and the 1950s a period now known as the McCarthy Era Senator Joseph McCarthy used his power as a senator to conduct a witch hunt for communists he claimed had infiltrated all levels of American society including Hollywood the State Department and the armed forces 44 When he began he held little influence or respect within the Senate 45 but he exploited Americans fears of communism and Congress desire to not lose re election to rise to prominence and keep the hunt going in spite of an increasingly apparent lack of evidence often accusing those who dared oppose him of being communists themselves 46 47 48 The Devil s music 1920s 1980s edit See also Parents Music Resource Center Over the years there has been concern of various types of new music causing spiritual or otherwise moral corruption to younger generations 49 often called the devil s music While the types of music popularly labeled as such has changed with time along with the intended meaning of the term this basic factor of the moral panic has remained constant It could thus be argued that this is really a series of smaller moral panics that fall under a larger umbrella While most notable in the United States other countries such as Romania 50 have seen exposure to or promotion of the idea as well Blues was one of the first music genres to receive this label mainly due to a perception that it incited violence and other poor behavior 51 In the early 20th century the blues was considered disreputable especially as white audiences began listening to the blues during the 1920s citation needed Jazz was another early receiver of the label At the time traditionalists considered jazz to contribute to the breakdown of morality 52 Despite the veiled attacks on blues and jazz as negro music often going hand in hand with other attacks on the genres urban middle class African Americans perceived jazz as devil s music and agreed with the beliefs that jazz s improvised rhythms and sounds were promoting promiscuity 53 Some have speculated that the rock phase of the panic in the 1970s and 1980s contributed to the popularity of the satanic ritual abuse moral panic in the 1980s 49 54 Switchblades 1950s edit Main article Switchblade 1950s gang usage and controversy In the United States a 1950 article titled The Toy That Kills in the Women s Home Companion 55 about automatic knives or switchblades sparked significant controversy It was further fuelled by highly popular films of the late 1950s including Rebel Without a Cause 1955 Crime in the Streets 1956 12 Angry Men 1957 The Delinquents High School Confidential 1958 and the 1957 Broadway musical West Side Story 56 57 Fixation on the switchblade as the symbol of youth violence sex and delinquency resulted in demands from the public and Congress to control the sale and possession of such knives 56 57 State laws restricting or criminalizing switchblade possession and use were adopted by an increasing number of state legislatures and many of the restrictive laws around them worldwide date back to this period citation needed Mods and rockers 1960s edit Main article Mods and rockers In early 1960s Britain the two main youth subcultures were Mods and Rockers The Mods and Rockers conflict was explored as an instance of moral panic by sociologist Stanley Cohen in his seminal study Folk Devils and Moral Panics 58 which examined media coverage of the Mod and Rocker riots in the 1960s 59 Although Cohen acknowledged that Mods and Rockers engaged in street fighting in the mid 1960s he argued that they were no different from the evening brawls that occurred between non Mod and non Rocker youths throughout the 1950s and early 1960s both at seaside resorts and after football games 60 Dungeons amp Dragons 1980s 1990s edit Main article Dungeons amp Dragons controversies At various times Dungeons amp Dragons and other tabletop role playing games have been accused of promoting such practices as Satanism witchcraft suicide pornography and murder In the 1980s and later some groups especially fundamentalist Christian groups accused the games of encouraging interest in sorcery and the veneration of demons 61 62 Satanic panic 1980s 1990s edit Main article Satanic panic The satanic panic was a series of moral panics regarding satanic ritual abuse that originated in the United States and spread to other English speaking countries in the 1980s and 1990s which led to a string of wrongful convictions 12 63 64 65 The West Memphis Three were three teenagers falsely accused of murdering children in a satanic ritual citation needed Two were sentenced to life in prison and one was sentenced to death before all being released after 18 years in prison HIV AIDS 1980s 1990s edit See also Gay plague Acquired immune deficiency syndrome AIDS is a viral illness that may lead to or exacerbate other health conditions such as pneumonia fungal infections tuberculosis toxoplasmosis and cytomegalovirus A meeting of the British Sociological Association s South West and Wales Study entitled AIDS The Latest Moral Panic was prompted by the growing interest of medical sociologists in AIDS as well as that of UK health care professionals working in the field of health education It took place at a time when both groups were beginning to voice an increased concern with the growing media attention and fear mongering that AIDS was attracting 66 In the 1980s a moral panic was created within the media over HIV AIDS For example in Britain a prominent advertisement by the government 67 suggested that the public was uninformed about HIV AIDS due to a lack of publicly accessible and accurate information citation needed The media outlets nicknamed HIV AIDS the gay plague which further stigmatized the disease However scientists gained a far better understanding of HIV AIDS as it grew in the 1980s and moved into the 1990s and beyond The illness was still negatively viewed by many as either being caused by or passed on through the gay community Once it became clear that this was not the case the moral panic created by the media changed to blaming the overall negligence of ethical standards by the younger generation both male and female resulting in another moral panic Authors behind AIDS Rights Risk and Reason argued that British TV and press coverage is locked into an agenda which blocks out any approach to the subject which does not conform in advance to the values and language of a profoundly homophobic culture a culture that does not regard gay men as fully or properly human No distinction obtains for the agenda between quality and tabloid newspapers or between popular and serious television 68 Similarly reports of a group of AIDS cases amongst gay men in Southern California which suggested that a sexually transmitted infectious agent might be the etiological agent 69 led to several terms relating to homosexuality being coined for the disease including gay plague 70 Dangerous dogs late 1980s early 1990s edit Main article Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 After a series of high profile dog attacks on children in the United Kingdom the British press began to engage in a campaign against so called dangerous dog breeds especially Pit Bulls and Rottweilers which bore all the hallmarks of a moral panic 71 72 73 This media pressure led the government to hastily introduce the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 which has been criticised as among the worst pieces of legislation ever seen a poorly thought out knee jerk reaction to tabloid headlines that was rushed through Parliament without proper scrutiny 74 The act specifically focused on Pit Bulls which were associated with the lower social strata of British society rather than the Rottweilers and Dobermann Pinschers generally owned by richer social groups Critics have identified the presence of social class as a factor in the dangerous dogs moral panic with establishment anxieties about the sub proletarian sector of British society displaced onto the folk devil of the Dangerous dog 72 73 Ongoing historic examples edit Increase in crime 1970s present edit Research shows that fear of increasing crime rates is often the cause of moral panics 7 26 75 76 Recent studies have shown that despite declining crime rates this phenomenon which often taps into a population s herd mentality continues to occur in various cultures Japanese jurist Koichi Hamai explains how the changes in crime recording in Japan since the 1990s caused people to believe that the crime rate was rising and that crimes were getting increasingly severe 77 Violence and video games 1970s present edit Main article Violence and video games See also Columbine effect There have been calls to regulate violence in video games for nearly as long as the video game industry has existed with Death Race being a notable early example 78 79 In the 1990s improvements in video game technology allowed for more lifelike depictions of violence in games such as Mortal Kombat and Doom The industry attracted controversy over violent content and concerns about effects they might have on players generating frequent media stories that attempted to associate video games with violent behavior in addition to a number of academic studies that reported conflicting findings about the strength of correlations 78 According to Christopher Ferguson sensationalist media reports and the scientific community unintentionally worked together in promoting an unreasonable fear of violent video games 80 Concerns from parts of the public about violent games led to cautionary often exaggerated news stories warnings from politicians and other public figures and calls for research to prove the connection which in turn led to studies speaking beyond the available data and allowing the promulgation of extreme claims without the usual scientific caution and skepticism 80 Since the 1990s there have been attempts to regulate violent video games in the United States through congressional bills as well as within the industry 78 Public concern and media coverage of violent video games reached a high point following the Columbine High School massacre in 1999 after which videos were found of the perpetrators Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold talking about violent games like Doom and making comparisons between the acts they intended to carry out and aspects of games 78 80 Ferguson and others have explained the video game moral panic as part of a cycle that all new media go through 80 81 82 In 2011 the U S Supreme Court ruled in Brown v Entertainment Merchants Association that legally restricting sales of video games to minors would be unconstitutional and deemed the research presented in favour of regulation as unpersuasive 80 War on drugs 1970s present edit Main article War on Drugs Some critics have pointed to moral panic as an explanation for the War on Drugs For example a Royal Society of Arts commission concluded that the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 is driven more by moral panic than by a practical desire to reduce harm 83 Some have written that one of the many rungs supporting the moral panic behind the War on Drugs was a separate but related moral panic which peaked in the late 1990s involving media s gross exaggeration of the frequency of the surreptitious use of date rape drugs 84 75 85 News media have been criticized for advocating grossly excessive protective measures for women particularly in coverage between 1996 and 1998 for overstating the threat and for excessively dwelling on the topic 75 For example a 2009 Australian study found that drug panel tests were unable to detect any drug in any of the 97 instances of patients admitted to the hospital believing their drinks might have been spiked 86 Sex offenders child sexual abuse and pedophilia 1970s present edit The media narrative of a sex offender highlighting egregious offenses as typical behaviour of any sex offender and media distorting the facts of some cases 87 has led legislators to attack judicial discretion 87 making sex offender registration mandatory based on certain listed offenses rather than individual risk or the actual severity of the crime thus practically catching less serious offenders under the domain of harsh sex offender laws In the 1990s and 2000s there have been instances of moral panics in the United Kingdom and the United States related to colloquial uses of the term pedophilia to refer to such unusual crimes as high profile cases of child abduction 63 The moral panic over pedophilia began in the 1970s after the sexual revolution While homosexuality was becoming more socially accepted after the sexual revolution pro contact pedophiles believed that the sexual revolution never helped pro contact pedophiles 88 In the 1970s pro contact pedophile activist organizations such as Paedophile Information Exchange PIE and North American Man Boy Love Association NAMBLA were formed in October 1974 and December 1978 respectively Despite receiving some support PIE received much backlash when they advocated for abolishing or lowering age of consent laws As a result people protested against PIE 89 Until the first half of the 1970s sex was not yet part of the concept of domestic child abuse which used to be limited to physical abuse and neglect 90 The sexual part of child abuse became prominent in the United States due to the encounter of two political agendas the fight against battered child syndrome by pediatricians during the 1960s and the feminist anti rape movement in particular the denunciation of domestic sexual violence 90 These two movements overlapped in 1975 creating a new political agenda about child sexual abuse Laura Lowenkron wrote The strong political and emotional appeal of the theme of child sexual abuse strengthened the feminist criticism of the patriarchal family structure according to which domestic violence is linked to the unequal power between men and women and between adults and children 90 Although the concern over child sexual abuse was caused by feminists the concern over child sexual abuse also attracted traditional groups and conservative groups Lowenkron added Concerned about the increasing expansion and acceptance of so called sexual deviations during what was called the libertarian age from the 1960s to the early 1970s conservative groups and traditional groups saw in the fight against child sexual abuse the chance to revive fears about crime and sexual dangers 90 In the 1980s the media began to report more frequently on cases of children being raped kidnapped or murdered leading to the moral panic over sex offenders and pedophiles becoming very intense in the early 1980s In 1981 for instance a six year old boy named Adam Walsh was abducted murdered and beheaded Investigators believe the murderer was serial killer Ottis Toole The murder of Adam Walsh took over nationwide news and led to a moral panic over child abduction followed by the creation of new laws for missing children 91 According to criminologist Richard Moran the Walsh case created a nation of petrified kids and paranoid parents Kids used to be able to go out and organize a stickball game and now all playdates and the social lives of children are arranged and controlled by the parents 91 Also during the 1980s inaccurate and heavily flawed data about sex offenders and their recidivism rates was published This data led to the public believing sex offenders to have a particularly high recidivism rate this in turn led to the creation of sex offender registries 92 Later information revealed that sex offenders including child sex offenders have a low recidivism rate 92 93 94 95 96 Other highly publicized cases similar to the murder of Adam Walsh that contributed to the creation of sex offender registries and sex offender laws include the abduction and murder of 11 year old boy Jacob Wetterling in 1989 the rape and murder of 7 year old girl Megan Kanka in 1994 and the rape and murder of 9 year old girl Jessica Lunsford in 2005 92 Another contributing factor in the moral panic over pedophiles and sex offenders was the day care sex abuse hysteria in the 1980s and early 1990s including the McMartin preschool trial This led to a panic where parents became hypervigilant with concerns of predatory child sex offenders seeking to abduct children in public spaces such as playgrounds 97 Contemporary examples edit Human trafficking 2000 present edit Many critics of contemporary anti prostitution activism argue that much of the current concern about human trafficking and its more general conflation with prostitution and other forms of sex work have hallmarks of moral panic They further argue that this moral panic shares much in common with the white slavery panic of a century earlier which in the US prompted passage of the 1910 Mann Act 98 99 100 101 Nick Davies argues that the following major factors contributed towards this effect Since the collapse of Communism Western Europe was flooded with sex workers from Eastern Europe and the term sex trafficking came to mean any organized movement of sex workers losing the connotation of force and coercion This change of the definition entered e g into the UK s Sexual Offences Act 2003 Second academic researchers on sex trade provided a range of estimates of the trafficked persons including estimates based on various assumptions up to the very pessimistic ones The media picked the most alarmist numbers which were uncritically used by politicians who in their turn were quoted for further misleading information 102 Terrorism and Islamic extremism 2001 present edit Main article War on Terror After the September 11 attacks in 2001 some scholars identified a rising fear of Muslims in the western world which they described as a moral panic 103 15 104 This exaggeration of the threat posed by Islam served a political purpose contributing to the concept of a global war on terror including the war in Afghanistan and a war in Iraq 15 105 Following the September 11 attacks there was a dramatic increase in hate crimes against Muslims and Arabs in the United States with rates peaking in 2001 and later surpassed in 2016 15 106 QAnon conspiracies 2020s edit QAnon a late 2010s to early 2020s far right conspiracy theory that began on 4chan and which alleged that a secret cabal of Jewish Satan worshipping cannibalistic pedophiles is running a global child sex trafficking ring has been described as a moral panic and compared to the 1980s panic over satanic ritual abuse 107 LGBT grooming conspiracy theory 2020s present edit Main article LGBT grooming conspiracy theory Since the early 2020s members of the far right and a growing number of mainstream conservatives mostly in the United States have falsely accused LGBT people as well as their allies and progressives in general of systematically using LGBT positive education and campaigns for LGBT rights as a method of child grooming 108 These accusations and conspiracy theories are characterized by experts as baseless homophobic and transphobic and as examples of moral panic 109 110 111 112 Criticism of moral panic as an explanation editPaul Joosse has argued that while classic moral panic theory styled itself as being part of the sceptical revolution that sought to critique structural functionalism it is actually very similar to Emile Durkheim s depiction of how the collective conscience is strengthened through its reactions to deviance in Cohen s case for example right thinkers use folk devils to strengthen societal orthodoxies In his analysis of Donald Trump s victory in the 2016 United States presidential election Joosse reimagined moral panic in Weberian terms showing how charismatic moral entrepreneurs can at once deride folk devils in the traditional sense while avoiding the conservative moral recapitulation that classic moral panic theory predicts 113 Another criticism is that of disproportionality there is no way to measure what a proportionate reaction should be to a specific action 114 Writing in 1995 about the moral panic that arose in the UK after a series of murders by juveniles chiefly that of two year old James Bulger by two 10 year old boys but also including that of 70 year old Edna Phillips by two 17 year old girls the sociologist Colin Hay pointed out that the folk devil was ambiguous in such cases the child perpetrators would normally be thought of as innocent 115 In 1995 Angela McRobbie and Sarah Thornton argued that it is now time that every stage in the process of constructing a moral panic as well as the social relations which support it should be revised Their argument is that mass media has changed since the concept of moral panic emerged so that folk devils are less marginalized than they once were and that folk devils are not only castigated by mass media but supported and defended by it as well They also suggest that the points of social control that moral panics used to rest on have undergone some degree of shift if not transformation 116 British criminologist Yvonne Jewkes 2004 has also raised issue with the term morality how it is accepted unproblematically in the concept of moral panic and how most research into moral panics fails to approach the term critically but instead accepts it at face value 41 Jewkes goes on to argue that the thesis and the way it has been used fails to distinguish between crimes that quite rightly offend human morality and thus elicit a justifiable reaction and those that demonise minorities The public are not sufficiently gullible to keep accepting the latter and consequently allow themselves to be manipulated by the media and the government 41 Another British criminologist Steve Hall 2012 goes a step further to suggest that the term moral panic is a fundamental category error Hall argues that although some crimes are sensationalized by the media in the general structure of the crime control narrative the ability of the existing state and criminal justice system to protect the public is also overstated Public concern is whipped up only for the purpose of being soothed which produces not panic but the opposite comfort and complacency 117 Echoing another point Hall makes sociologists Thompson and Williams 2013 argue that the concept of moral panic is not a rational response to the phenomenon of social reaction but itself a product of the irrational middle class fear of the imagined working class mob Using as an example a peaceful and lawful protest staged by local mothers against the re housing of sex offenders on their estate Thompson and Williams argue that the sensationalist demonization of the protesters by moral panic theorists and the liberal press was just as irrational as the demonization of the sex offenders by the protesters and the tabloid press 118 Many sociologists and criminologists Ungar Hier Rohloff full citation needed have revised Cohen s original framework The revisions are compatible with the way in which Cohen theorizes panics in the third Introduction to Folk Devils and Moral Panics 119 See also edit nbsp Psychology portal nbsp Society portalAlarmism Excessive or exaggerated alarm about a real or imagined threat Antisemitic canard Hoaxes or other false stories about Jews and JudaismPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Blood libel False claim that Jews killed Christians to use blood in ceremonies List of common misconceptions Conspiracy theory Attributing events to secret plots instead of more probable explanation List of conspiracy theories Deviance sociology Action or behavior that violates social norms False accusation Claim or allegation of wrongdoing that is untrue Fear mongering Deliberate use of fear based tacticsPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Labeling theory Labeling people changes their behavior LGBT ideology free zone Region in PolandPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Major Boobage a fictional depiction of one Mass hysteria Spread of illness without organic causePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets List of mass hysteria cases Moral entrepreneur Persecutory delusion Delusion involving perception of persecution The Population Bomb 1968 Recovered memory therapy Scientifically discredited form of psychotherapy Satanic ritual abuse Widespread moral panic alleging abusePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Social mania Social panic Extreme community reaction Social stigma Type of discrimination or disapproval Think of the children Cliche phrase Witch hunt Search for witchcraft or subversive activity Modern witch hunts Witch trials in the early modern period Prosecutions for witchcraft in EuropeReferences edit a b c d e f Crossman Ashley Understanding How Moral Panic Threatens Freedom ThoughtCo Retrieved 1 June 2021 a b c Walsh James P November 2020 Social media and moral panics Assessing the effects of technological change on societal reaction International Journal of Cultural Studies 23 6 840 859 doi 10 1177 1367877920912257 PMC 7201200 a b Jones Marsha 1999 Mass media Houndmills Basingstoke Hampshire Macmillan ISBN 978 0333672068 a b Scott John 2014 A Dictionary of Sociology Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199683581 page needed Pedneault Amelie February 2019 Child Abuse and Neglect Forensic Issues in Evidence Impact and Management 1st ed Cambridge Massachusetts Academic Press pp 419 433 ISBN 978 0128153444 a b Cohen 2011 p 1 a b c d e f g h i j k Cohen 2011 p page needed a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Critcher Chas 2017 Moral Panics Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190264079 013 155 ISBN 978 0 19 026407 9 Hesselink Louw Anne Olivier Karen 1 October 2001 A criminological analysis of crimes against disabled children the adult male sexual offender Child Abuse Research in South Africa 2 2 15 20 Lancaster Roger 2011 Sex Panic and the Punitive State Berkeley California University of California Press pp 4 33 34 76 79 ISBN 978 0520262065 Extein Andrew 25 October 2013 Fear the Bogeyman Sex Offender Panic on Halloween Huffington Post Retrieved 26 November 2014 a b c d e Goode amp Ben Yehuda 2009 pp 57 65 Deflem Mathieu 2020 Popular Culture and Social Control The Moral Panic on Music Labeling American Journal of Criminal Justice 45 1 2 24 First published online July 24 2019 a b Rodwell Grant 2017 Moral Panics and School Educational Policy Routledge Research in Education Policy and Politics London England Taylor amp Francis p 188 ISBN 978 1351627818 Retrieved 29 March 2019 As with the reds under the beds moral panics of the post World War II decades moral panics have often been manufactured for political purposes a b c d e Brysk Alison Meade Everard Shafir Gershon 2013 1 Introduction Constructing national and global insecurity In Shafir Gershon Meade Everard Aceves William J eds Lessons and Legacies of the War On Terror From moral panic to permanent war Routledge Critical Terrorism Studies London Routledge p 1 ISBN 978 1136188749 Retrieved 29 March 2019 The contributors examine the social cultural and political drivers of the war on terror through the framework of a political moral panic Carol Morley Mass hysteria is a powerful group activity The Guardian 29 March 2015 Retrieved 2 June 2021 Dr Cox on regeneration Millennial Harbinger 1 546 550 1830 OCLC 1695161 Preview Cox asserted that regeneration of the soul should be an active process and stated if it be a fact that the soul is just as active in regeneration as in any other thing then what shall we call that kind of orthodoxy that proposes to make men better by teaching them the reverse To paralyze the soul or to strike it through with a moral panic is not regeneration page 546 and After quoting such scriptures as these Seek and you shall find Come unto me and I will give you rest they ask is it not the natural language of these expressions that the mind is as far as possible from stagnation or torpor or moral panic p 548 Hodge Charles 1830 Review Regeneration and the manner of its occurrence The Biblical Repertory and Theological Review 2 250 297 OCLC 8841951 The Journal of Health Conducted by an Association of Physicians 1831 p 180 Magendie a French physician of note on his visit to Sunderland where the Cholera was by the last accounts still raging praises the English government for not surrounding the town with a cordon of troops which as a physical preventive would have been ineffectual and would have produced a moral panic far more fatal than the disease now is McLuhan Marshall 1994 Understanding Media The Extensions of Man Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 63159 4 page needed Cohen 2011 p vi a b c d Mannion Russell 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Hier Sean Patrick ed Moral Panic and the Politics of Anxiety London Routledge p 58 ISBN 978 0415555555 McRobbie Angela Thornton Sarah L 2000 1991 Rethinking moral panic for multi mediated social worlds in McRobbie Angela ed Feminism and youth culture 2nd ed Houndmills Basingstoke Hampshire Macmillan Press pp 180 197 ISBN 978 0333770320 Also available as McRobbie Angela Thornton Sarah L 1995 Rethinking Moral Panic for Multi Mediated Social Worlds The British Journal of Sociology 46 4 559 doi 10 2307 591571 JSTOR 591571 Hall S 2012 Theorizing Crime and Deviance A New Perspective London Sage pp 132 139 ISBN 978 1 84860 672 2 Thompson W Williams A 2013 The Myth of Moral Panics Sex Snuff and Satan Routledge Advances in Criminology London Routledge ISBN 978 0415812665 page needed Hier Sean P 2011 Tightening the focus Moral panic moral regulation and liberal government The British Journal of Sociology 62 3 523 541 doi 10 1111 j 1468 4446 2011 01377 x PMID 21899526 Sources editCohen Stanley 2011 Folk Devils and Moral Panics doi 10 4324 9780203828250 ISBN 978 0 203 82825 0 Cohen Stanley 2002 Folk Devils and Moral Panics The Creation of the Mods and Rockers London amp New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 26712 0 Goode Erich Ben Yehuda Nachman 2009 Moral Panics The Social Construction of Deviance Wiley ISBN 978 1 4051 8933 0 Further reading editBarron Christie Lacombe Dany 2008 Moral Panic and the Nasty Girl Canadian Review of Sociology 42 51 69 doi 10 1111 j 1755 618X 2005 tb00790 x Ben Yehuda Nachman 1986 The Sociology of Moral Panics Toward a New Synthesis The Sociological Quarterly 27 4 495 513 doi 10 1111 j 1533 8525 1986 tb00274 x Boethius Ulf 1995 Youth the media and moral panics in Fornas Johan Bolin Goran eds Youth culture in late modernity London amp Thousand Oaks CA SAGE pp 39 57 ISBN 978 0803988996 Colomb Wendy Damphousse Kelly 2004 Examination of newspaper coverage of Hate Crimes A moral panic perspective American Journal of Criminal Justice 28 2 147 doi 10 1007 BF02885869 S2CID 145519152 Cree Viviene E Clapton Gary Smith Mark 2015 Revisiting moral panics Bristol UK Chicago Policy Press ISBN 978 1447321859 Critcher Chas 2008 Moral Panic Analysis Past Present and Future Sociology Compass 2 4 1127 1144 doi 10 1111 j 1751 9020 2008 00122 x Gill Aisha K Harrison Karen 2015 Child Grooming and Sexual Exploitation Are South Asian Men the UK Media s New Folk Devils International Journal for Crime Justice and Social Democracy 4 2 34 49 doi 10 5204 ijcjsd v4i2 214 S2CID 54797987 Fitzgerald Maureen H 2005 Punctuated Equilibrium Moral Panics and the Ethics Review Process Journal of Academic Ethics 2 4 315 338 doi 10 1007 s10805 005 9004 y S2CID 145303045 Frankfurter David 2008 Evil Incarnate Rumors of Demonic Conspiracy and Satanic Abuse in History Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691136295 Gausel Nicolay Leach Colin Wayne 2011 Concern for self image and social image in the management of moral failure Rethinking shame European Journal of Social Psychology 41 4 468 doi 10 1002 ejsp 803 Heathcott Joseph 2011 Moral panic in a plural culture CrossCurrents 61 39 44 doi 10 1111 j 1939 3881 2010 00159 x S2CID 143002118 Hier S P 2002 Conceptualizing Moral Panic through a Moral Economy of Harm Critical Sociology 28 3 311 334 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 117 1290 doi 10 1177 08969205020280030301 S2CID 16081774 Hunt Arnold 1997 Moral Panic and Moral Language in the Media The British Journal of Sociology 48 4 629 648 doi 10 2307 591600 JSTOR 591600 Jasper James M 2001 Moral panics in Smelser Neil J Baltes Paul B eds International encyclopedia of the social amp behavioral sciences Amsterdam amp New York Elsevier pp 10029 10033 ISBN 978 0080430768 Klapp Orrin E 1954 Heroes Villains and Fools as Agents of Social Control American Sociological Review 19 1 56 62 doi 10 2307 2088173 JSTOR 2088173 Klocke Brian V Muschert Glenn W 2010 A Hybrid Model of Moral Panics Synthesizing the Theory and Practice of Moral Panic Research Sociology Compass 4 5 295 doi 10 1111 j 1751 9020 2010 00281 x Kuzma Cindy 28 September 2005 Rights and liberties sex lies and moral panics AlterNet Archived from the original on 19 May 2008 Retrieved 5 September 2008 Author affiliation Planned Parenthood Federation of America PPFA Lawson Louanne 2008 Why Moral Panic is Dangerous Journal of Forensic Nursing 3 2 57 59 doi 10 1111 j 1939 3938 2007 tb00103 x PMID 17679267 Monod Sarah Wright ed Making Sense of Moral Panics A Framework for Research Palgrave Studies in Risk Crime and Society 2017 ISBN missing Montana Riccardo 2009 Prosecutors and the Definition of the Crime Problem in Italy Balancing the Impact of Moral Panics PDF Criminal Law Forum 20 4 471 494 doi 10 1007 s10609 009 9108 y S2CID 143090113 Pearce J M Charman E 2011 A social psychological approach to understanding moral panic Crime Media Culture 7 3 293 doi 10 1177 1741659011417607 S2CID 145149474 Rodwell Grant 2011 One newspaper s role in the demise of the Tasmanian Essential Learnings Curriculum Adding new understandings to Cohen s moral panic theory in analyzing curriculum change Journal of Educational Change 12 4 441 456 doi 10 1007 s10833 011 9163 0 S2CID 143481477 Rohloff A Wright S 2010 Moral Panic and Social Theory Beyond the Heuristic Current Sociology 58 3 403 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 427 24 doi 10 1177 0011392110364039 S2CID 44838870 Ungar Sheldon 2001 Moral panic versus the risk society The implications of the changing sites of social anxiety British Journal of Sociology 52 2 271 291 doi 10 1080 00071310120044980 PMID 11440057 Victor Jeffrey S 1998 Moral Panics and the Social Construction of Deviant Behavior A Theory and Application to the Case of Ritual Child Abuse Sociological Perspectives 41 3 541 565 doi 10 2307 1389563 JSTOR 1389563 S2CID 18583486 Waiton Stuart 2008 The politics of antisocial behaviour amoral panics New York Routledge ISBN 978 0415957052 Ward Russell E 2002 Fan violence Aggression and Violent Behavior 7 5 453 475 doi 10 1016 S1359 1789 01 00075 1 Moral panic studies working paper series College of Business Arts and Social Sciences Brunel University London Volume 49 Issue 1 January 2009 The British Journal of Criminology Oxford University Press Academic Ben Yehuda Nachman 2009 Foreword Moral Panics 36 Years on British Journal of Criminology 49 1 1 3 doi 10 1093 bjc azn076 JSTOR 23639651 Young Jock 2009 Moral Panic Its Origins in Resistance Ressentiment and the Translation of Fantasy into Reality British Journal of Criminology 49 1 4 16 doi 10 1093 bjc azn074 JSTOR 23639652 SSRN 1315137 Critcher Chas 2009 Widening the Focus Moral Panics as Moral Regulation British Journal of Criminology 49 1 17 34 doi 10 1093 bjc azn040 JSTOR 23639653 SSRN 1315133 Jenkins Philip 2009 Failure to Launch Why Do Some Social Issues Fail to Detonate Moral Panics British Journal of Criminology 49 1 35 47 doi 10 1093 bjc azn016 JSTOR 23639654 SSRN 1315131 Levi Michael 2009 Suite Revenge The Shaping of Folk Devils and Moral Panics about White Collar Crimes British Journal of Criminology 49 1 48 67 doi 10 1093 bjc azn073 JSTOR 23639655 SSRN 1315136 Ajzenstadt Mimi 2009 Moral Panic and Neo Liberalism The Case of Single Mothers on Welfare in Israel British Journal of Criminology 49 1 68 87 doi 10 1093 bjc azn067 JSTOR 23639656 SSRN 1315135 Weitzer Ronald 2009 Legalizing Prostitution Morality Politics in Western Australia British Journal of Criminology 49 1 88 105 doi 10 1093 bjc azn027 JSTOR 23639657 SSRN 1315132 Woodiwiss Michael Hobbs Dick 2009 Organized Evil and the Atlantic Alliance Moral Panics and the Rhetoric of Organized Crime Policing in America and Britain British Journal of Criminology 49 1 106 128 doi 10 1093 bjc azn054 JSTOR 23639658 SSRN 1315134 External links edit nbsp Media related to Moral panic at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Quotations related to Moral panic at Wikiquote nbsp The dictionary definition of moral panic at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Moral panic amp oldid 1199464863, 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