2011
DOI: 10.5204/mcj.337
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(Un)reasonable Doubt: A "Narrative Immunity" for Footballers against Sexual Assault Allegations

Abstract: Photograph by Gonzalo Echeverria (2010)“Beyond reasonable doubt” is the standard of proof for criminal cases in a court of law. However, what happens when doubt, reasonable or otherwise, is embedded in the media reporting of criminal cases, even before charges have been laid? This paper will analyse newspaper reports of recent rape cases involving Australian footballers, and identify narrative figures that are used to locate blame solely with the alleged victims, protecting the footballers from blame. I uncove… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Although her stated motivation was revenge, she contextualised her actions within the misogyny of AFL and routine player abuse of girls and women (Cover, 2012). Her complaint was the latest of several allegations of rape and sexual misconduct by elite Australian football players (Waterhouse-Watson, 2011). Media coverage of Duthie was largely sympathetic until a number of inconsistencies emerged in her story, including the possibility that she ‘faked’ her pregnancy.…”
Section: The Case Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although her stated motivation was revenge, she contextualised her actions within the misogyny of AFL and routine player abuse of girls and women (Cover, 2012). Her complaint was the latest of several allegations of rape and sexual misconduct by elite Australian football players (Waterhouse-Watson, 2011). Media coverage of Duthie was largely sympathetic until a number of inconsistencies emerged in her story, including the possibility that she ‘faked’ her pregnancy.…”
Section: The Case Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Flood (2008) defined such spaces as homosocial, peculiar aspects of which include that they prioritize men's relationships to other men, exclude women, and often involve the fetishization of masculinity and sexual conquest, with performances of the same for the benefit of other men. Men-only, homosocial environments, then, can contribute to hypermasculine attitudes and behaviours (Anderson, 2008;Cover, 2015;Flood, 2008;Waterhouse-Watson, 2011).…”
Section: Masculine Exemplars and Role Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The values that help shape rape culture are often perpetuated by news media; Franiuk et al (2008) found that rape myth-endorsing headlines led male subjects to be less likely to find accused rapists guilty and to hold more rape-supportive attitudes. Researchers have also pointed out that journalists covering rape trials often help promote the rapemyth inundated strategies of defense lawyers trying to discredit alleged rape victims (Franiuk et al, 2008;Meyer, 2010;Waterhouse-Watson, 2011). All of this reporting serves to render female crime victims mute; they have no agency in the stories detailing the crimes committed against them.…”
Section: Sexual Assault: Statistical Realities and Media Representationsmentioning
confidence: 99%