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Journal Article

Citation

Lee ST, Thien NP. Int. Comm. Gaz. 2015; 77(1): 24-50.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1748048514556978

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This study contributes to the limited literature on race and crime in a multicultural Asian context. Based on a survey in Singapore, where multiracialism is a fundamental political pillar and yet discourse about race is mostly shunned, the findings suggest a relationship between media consumption and racial perceptions. Respondents who consume more race-specific media have less negative racial perceptions of their own race, and more negative racial perceptions about other races. Respondents who consume more crime-related media content on TV, newspapers, and social networking sites tend to be more racially prejudiced against other races. Those who pay more attention to crime-related media content hold more negative racial perceptions of other races, and have harsher criminal culpability judgments of other races while holding a diminished culpability judgment of one's own race.


Language: en

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