Media Perception and Correctional Centre’s Portrayal of Female Offenders in Nigeria
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Date
2022Author
Omoera, Osakue Stevenson
Ebobo, Christiana Urowoli
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Female offending has become one of the topical issues in the Nigerian mass media. It is not news
that females are engaged in crimes even though
they are often perceived as harmless, meek, weak
and in need of protection. The way female offenders are portrayed in the mass media in Nigeria
and elsewhere should be of concern to feminist
criminologists, media sociologists and development scholars. This issue has hardly received
scholarly attention. Both males and females share
the propensity to commit crime regardless of the
gender differences. Available literature and statistics indicate that they are both actively involved
in crime and the frequency of committal by the
males is more than the females. Deploying the
feminist theory as its theoretical parameter, this
longitudinal study examined the portrayal of female offenders in the mass media in Nigeria. The
study heavily relied on secondary sources of data
collection from the National Bureau of Statistics
(NBS), Nigerian Correctional Service (NCoS),
print and electronic media and academic journals. Data was analyzed based on content analysis. The results indicated that though females are
in all the categories of offences but their numbers
are almost insignificant compared to that of the
males. It further established that the highest percentage differences in male and female offending
is not more than 6.4% for the females and 93.7%
for the males from all the categories of offences
analyzed within a period of 6 years in Nigeria
(2010-2016). The study, therefore, recommended,
among others, that the mass media presentation
of offences should be devoid of biased gender reporting.
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http://sinestesieonline.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/maggio2022-20.pdfhttp://elea.unisa.it/xmlui/handle/10556/7578