Pollock (1973) and applied to the study of transnational organized crime by James Sheptycki. The public’s perception of and reaction to organized crime is largely shaped by the media’s representation of it this representation develops and is reinforced via a ‘linguistic authority structure’ – a framework for understanding how abstract concepts are transformed into specific definitions, first developed by J. But the media also has a heavy hand in shaping the language and rhetoric used to understand (or misunderstand) what organized crime actually is and how it actually works (see Rawlinson, Chapter 19). Without a doubt, mainstream media plays an important role in the analysis and dissemination of organized criminal activities.
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