ABSTRACT

What can we learn from the legal cases of Stephen Lawrence and Louise Woodward? How do the legal system and the media contribute to a collective understanding of class, nation, race and gender? In this book, Siobhan Holohan explores media representations of law and order in the context of notions of multi-culturalism and victim-centred politics. Two high profile cases - the murder of Stephen Lawrence and the US trial of the British au-pair, Louise Woodward - are examined. Holohan argues that the stories built up around Woodward and Lawrence - the organization of public discourse around a sacrificial figure - have contributed to exclusionary patterns of social order. The book offers a perceptive account of what makes some criminal legal cases prone to scrutiny and spectacle and provides a vivid illustration of the presence of power relations in legal decisions. In conclusion, the author draws on the model of the Macpherson report to propose a more inclusive form of social and legal judgement that takes into account social inequalities.

part I|68 pages

Gender and Power

chapter Two|22 pages

Symbolic Transformations

chapter Three|21 pages

The Scapegoat Mechanism

part II|79 pages

Reading Racism

chapter Four|20 pages

Ethnic Subjectivity and Identity Reformation

chapter Five|26 pages

The Violence of Discourse

chapter Six|21 pages

Criminal Justice and Society