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Journal Article

Citation

Shelby RM, Hatch AR. Crim. Justice Stud. Crit. J. Crime Law Soc. 2014; 27(4): 402-418.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/1478601X.2014.928459

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Sexual violence remains a pervasive and persistent social problem. In 1996, Congress enacted Megan's Law, dictating mandatory community notification and potential civil commitment for those deemed by the State to be dangerous sexual offenders. In 2013, Megan's Law continues to influence the treatment of sexual offenders under law and the social construction of a highly publicized, yet statistically rare, sexual crime - the rape and murder of a young female child by a depraved male stranger. This influence highlights the extent to which this personalized crime bill shapes the social construction of sexual violence in terms of sex and gender systems. This paper examines how sex and gender shape media discourses of the sexual offender and victim that are mobilized in the legislative debate on Megan's Law. Drawing on theoretical ideas from cultural studies and feminist legal scholarship, we employ discourse analysis to analyze the legislative debate on Megan's Law. We find that high-profile media images of sex offenders and victims are relied on to construct a singular image of sexual violence, whereby a child is victimized by an adult sexual predator. These images draw on traditional, conservative notions of gender and sexuality.


Language: en

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