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The Missile Gap: A Moral Panic for an Atomic AgeGresham, Brian Michael 10 December 2015 (has links)
This research is examines the nuclear arms race that dominated the 20th century, during which the United States manufactured and stockpiled a large number of strategic weapons. Using moral panic theory, the roles of the President of the United States and the media are examined in facilitating public interest in the manufacture of these weapons from 1955-1990. The project uses both time series and historical analyses to determine the extent to which the strategic nuclear weapons crisis was a moral panic created to insure public acceptance of such this massive defense sector expenditure. The time series analysis reveals that the President does have the ability to influence the public via the State of the Union Address, but that influence does not extend strongly to the media. However, what influence the President does have appears to be correlated to the use of substantive rhetoric, and the percentage of the speech dedicated to the issue. Finally, the historical analysis demonstrates that the moral panic moves through three phases. The first phase is characterized by grassroots concern over the technical gap represented by Sputnik 1's launch was utilized by interested actors to accomplish their goals. During the second phase, this concern transformed into an institutional technique utilized for deflecting institutional challenges when the moral panic moved into an interest group model. The final phase occurs during the rise of the "security state", when elites begin using the moral panic to achieve their own ends. / Ph. D.
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Moral Panic and Political Rhetoric in the Early American RepublicWhitley, Daniel Edward 19 June 2018 (has links)
This study analyzes the reporting and editorializing in several major American newspapers during the height of the Citizen Genêt Affair in July and August, 1793. A hybrid form of sociological moral panic theory, focused predominantly on the "iteration" of moral panics and the language used to communicate them, is used to understand the dynamics of the information landscape of 1793. Specific attention is paid to the effects of time and space, personal and political bias, and incendiary historical rhetoric on reporting of and reactions to Genêt's actions. In doing so, this study highlights possible flaws or blind spots in both moral panic theory and historiography, and brings new understanding to the media environment in which America's political traditions gestated. Brief connections are drawn between this historical information landscape and series of events and contemporary concerns with regards to social media and incendiary political rhetoric. / Master of Arts / One of America's first political and diplomatic scandals, the Citizen Genêt Affair of 1793, had a large impact on the foundation of the nation's original political traditions. Though this event usually constitutes little more than a footnote in traditional histories of America's formative years, newspaper reporting from the time casts the events of this scandal in a much different light. Numerous similarities can be observed between reporting on the Citizen Genêt Affair and a classic moral panic as outlined in sociological theory. At the same time however, studying these newspaper reports as a moral panic displays certain complications in moral panic theory in its present form. Finally, in studying this reporting, we can gain new understanding about incendiary political rhetoric in contemporary American media.
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Corporate Media Framing of Political Rhetoric: The Creation of a Moral Panic in the wake of September 11th 2001Mason, John Paul 12 October 2009 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to examine the rhetoric and subsequent media framing of President George W. Bush during the years following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and how such frames have been able to generate and sustain a national moral panic. While a number of scholars have explored the effect of presidential rhetoric in generating panic (53; Cohen 1972; Goode and Ben-Yehuda 1994; Hawdon 2001; Kappeler and Kappeler 2004), none have evaluated the effect of media framing on such rhetoric. This study will use three major sources of data: (1) National Public Opinion Data from Gallup Poll, (2) daily USA Today news articles, and (3) rates of international terrorism from the U.S. State Department. Employing a content analysis of USA Today articles pertaining to terrorism, I will evaluate the relevant themes used by the corporate media to frame the Bush administration's rhetoric, and further analyze the relationship between such rhetoric and the collective conscience across the eight years of the Bush presidency, while controlling for rates of international terrorism. / Master of Science
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On folk devils, moral panics and new wave public healthMannion, R., Small, Neil A. 28 November 2020 (has links)
Yes / New wave public health places an emphasis on exhorting individuals to engage in healthy behaviour with good health being a signifier of virtuous moral standing, whereas poor health is often associated with personal moral failings. In effect, the medical is increasingly being collapsed into the moral. This approach is consistent with other aspects of contemporary neoliberal governance, but it fuels moral panics and creates folk devils. We explore the implications and dysfunctional consequences of this new wave of public health policy in the context of the latest moral panic around obesity.
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Moral Panics in a Globalised Media Landscape : Case Studies and Implications for Society and PolicyKarastanchev, Vasil January 2024 (has links)
This thesis explores the phenomenon of moral panics in American society, focusing on three cases: the automatic knife panic in the 1950s, the migrant caravan panic in 2018, and the LGBTQ+ "groomer" panic in 2022. Utilizing Stanley Cohen’s concept of moral pan- ics, expanded by David Garland and Goode, the research aims to understand the origins, amplification of risks, perceived threats, and socio-political consequences of these moral panics. The methodology involves content, narrative, and discourse analysis of legislative acts, academic literature, and contemporary media coverage. Findings reveal that interest groups, namely media and political figures, significantly contribute to constructing and am- plifying moral panics. Exaggerated perception of risks to society, either through false claim-making or cultural trauma, drove a moral panic in each of these cases, leading to increased social control through legislation and the stigmatization and discrimination of minority groups.This research contributes to ongoing efforts to combat prejudice and social injustice by shedding light on the societal ramifications of moral panic. It underscores the need for further investigation into the motivations of interest groups to spread moral panics and strategies for preventing their occurrence in a globalised media landscape. The study opens discussions on media manipulation and human rights.
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Panikattacken mit frühem und spätem Beginn: Unterschiedliche pathogenetische Mechanismen? / Early- and Late-Onset Panic Attacks: Evidence for Different Pathogenic Mechanisms?Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich, Perkonigg, Axel 03 December 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Panikattacken sind mit einer Lebenszeitprävalenz von ungefähr 15% ein relativ häufiges Phänomen im Gegensatz zu einer vollen Panikstörung, die eine Prävalenz von 2,3–3% aufweist. In der vorliegenden epidemiologischen Untersuchung (n = 481) einer bundesweiten repräsentativen Stichprobe wurde geprüft, ob früh (vor dem 25. Lebensjahr) und spat auftretende Panikattacken sich hinsichtlich Symptomatik, Verlaufs- und Komorbiditätsmustern unterscheiden. Neben einer erhöhten Angstsymptomatik, insbesondere bezüglich respiratorischer Beschwerden und der Angst zu sterben, zeigte sich bei Panikattacken mit spätem Beginn ein erhöhtes Risiko für Multimorbidität. Auch entwickelten sich bei dieser Gruppe komorbide Bedingungen schneller. Dagegen waren Panikattacken mit frühem Beginn und einem erhöhten Risiko für Agoraphobie sowie phobische Störungen verbunden. Die Ergebnisse werden im Hinblick auf pathogenetische Mechanismen und Implikationen für die Planung therapeutischer Interventionen diskutiert.
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Dynamics of Defensive Reactivity in Patients with Panic Disorder and Agoraphobia: Implications for the Etiology of Panic DisorderRichter, Jan, Hamm, Alfons O., Pané-Farré, Christiane A., Gerlach, Alexander L., Gloster, Andrew T., Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich, Lang, Thomas, Alpers, Georg W., Helbig-Lang, Sylvia, Deckert, Jürgen, Fydrich, Thomas, Fehm, Lydia, Ströhle, Andreas, Kircher, Tilo, Arolt, Volker 15 August 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Background: The learning perspective of panic disorder distinguishes between acute panic and anxious apprehension as distinct emotional states. Following animal models, these clinical entities reflect different stages of defensive reactivity depending upon the imminence of interoceptive or exteroceptive threat cues. The current study tested this model by investigating the dynamics of defensive reactivity in a large group of patients with panic disorder and agoraphobia (PD/AG).
Methods: Three hundred forty-five PD/AG patients participated in a standardized behavioral avoidance test (being entrapped in a small, dark chamber for 10 minutes). Defense reactivity was assessed measuring avoidance and escape behavior, self-reports of anxiety and panic symptoms, autonomic arousal (heart rate and skin conductance), and potentiation of the startle reflex before and during exposure of the behavioral avoidance test.
Results: Panic disorder and agoraphobia patients differed substantially in their defensive reactivity. While 31.6% of the patients showed strong anxious apprehension during this task (as indexed by increased reports of anxiety, elevated physiological arousal, and startle potentiation), 20.9% of the patients escaped from the test chamber. Active escape was initiated at the peak of the autonomic surge accompanied by an inhibition of the startle response as predicted by the animal model. These physiological responses resembled the pattern observed during the 34 reported panic attacks.
Conclusions: We found evidence that defensive reactivity in PD/AG patients is dynamically organized ranging from anxious apprehension to panic with increasing proximity of interoceptive threat. These data support the learning perspective of panic disorder.
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Treatment acceptability of a well-established cognitive behavioral therapy for panic disorder in a Passamaqyoddy community /Ranslow, Elizabeth. January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D.) in Psychology--University of Maine, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 136-169).
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Panikattacken mit frühem und spätem Beginn: Unterschiedliche pathogenetische Mechanismen?Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich, Perkonigg, Axel January 1993 (has links)
Panikattacken sind mit einer Lebenszeitprävalenz von ungefähr 15% ein relativ häufiges Phänomen im Gegensatz zu einer vollen Panikstörung, die eine Prävalenz von 2,3–3% aufweist. In der vorliegenden epidemiologischen Untersuchung (n = 481) einer bundesweiten repräsentativen Stichprobe wurde geprüft, ob früh (vor dem 25. Lebensjahr) und spat auftretende Panikattacken sich hinsichtlich Symptomatik, Verlaufs- und Komorbiditätsmustern unterscheiden. Neben einer erhöhten Angstsymptomatik, insbesondere bezüglich respiratorischer Beschwerden und der Angst zu sterben, zeigte sich bei Panikattacken mit spätem Beginn ein erhöhtes Risiko für Multimorbidität. Auch entwickelten sich bei dieser Gruppe komorbide Bedingungen schneller. Dagegen waren Panikattacken mit frühem Beginn und einem erhöhten Risiko für Agoraphobie sowie phobische Störungen verbunden. Die Ergebnisse werden im Hinblick auf pathogenetische Mechanismen und Implikationen für die Planung therapeutischer Interventionen diskutiert.
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The epidemiology of panic disorder and agoraphobia in EuropeGoodwin, Renee D., Faravelli, Carlo, Rosi, S., Cosci, F., Truglia, E., Graaf, Ron de, Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich January 2005 (has links)
A literature search, in addition to expert survey, was performed to estimate the size and burden of panic disorder in the European Union (EU). Epidemiologic data from EU countries were critically reviewed to determine the consistency of prevalence estimates across studies and to identify the most pressing questions for future research. A comprehensive literature search focusing on epidemiological studies in community and clinical settings in European countries since 1980 was conducted (Medline, Web of Science, Psychinfo). Only studies using established diagnostic instruments on the basis of DSM-III-R or DSM-IV, or ICD-10 were considered. Thirteen studies from a total of 14 countries were identified. Epidemiological findings are relatively consistent across the EU. The 12-month prevalence of panic disorder and agoraphobia without history of panic were estimated to be 1.8% (0.7–2.2) and 1.3% (0.7–2.0) respectively across studies. Rates are twice as high in females and age of first onset for both disorders is in adolescence or early adulthood. In addition to comorbidity with agoraphobia, panic disorder is strongly associated with other anxiety disorders, and a wide range of somatoform, affective and substance use disorders. Even subclinical forms of panic disorder (i.e., panic attacks) are associated with substantial distress, psychiatric comorbidity and functional impairment. In general health primary care settings, there appears to be substantial underdiagnosis and undertreatment of panic disorder. Moreover, panic disorder and agoraphobia are poorly recognized and rarely treated in mental health settings, despite high health care utilization rates and substantial long-term disability.
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