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      • Media institutions in particular have assumed a bullhorn role in broadcasting the association between capital punishment and closure, publicly articulating, circulating, and ultimately reinforcing this link.
      oxfordre.com/criminology/display/10.1093/acrefore/9780190264079.001.0001/acrefore-9780190264079-e-20
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  2. Crucially, the media’s relationship with capital punishment and closure has always been at most indirect, surfacing in quotes or statements from journalists, government officials, attorneys, and victims’ families (Gross & Matheson, 2003; Vollum & Longmire, 2007).

  3. The identification of closure with capital punishment is a fairly recent development, given the centuries-long history of the death penalty

  4. Many crimes receive extensive media coverage, which provides a challenge for prosecutors, as well as defendants and defense attorneys, when it comes to trying a case. Juries are supposed to be unbiased when deciding a case, despite the news coverage they may have come across before trial.

  5. Semantic Scholar extracted view of "Capital Punishment, Closure, and Media" by J. Madeira

  6. Feb 24, 2014 · Using a 2010 survey in Washington state, this article tests the theoretical connection between watching television (news, crime dramas, and police-reality programs), reading the newspaper, listening to the radio, interacting with the Internet, and support for capital punishment.

    • Sarah Britto, Krystal E. Noga-Styron
    • 2014
  7. Jun 23, 2010 · Capital punishment for murder was finally abolished in the UK and replaced with a mandatory life sentence in all cases by the Murder (Abolition of Death Penalty) Act, 1965. Nevertheless, since the ...

  8. In contemporary society, “closure” refers to “end to a traumatic event or an emotional process” (Berns, 2011, pp. 18–19)—and, in the more specific ...