Kenneth Thompson
Published: 1998
1) "Newspaper deadlines continually warn of some new danger resulting in moral laxity" - p1
2) "moral panics are nothing new" - p1
3) "Almost anything can spark off a panic" - p2
4) "Contemporary panics seem to catch many ore people in their net" - p2
5) "seem to call into question the very institution of the family" - p2
6) "Britain is not alone in having moral panics they seem to be increasingly frequent in modern societies as we approach the millennium" - p2
7) "points relevant to understanding the phenomenon of moral panics. Th first is that they take the form of campaigns (crusades), which are sustained over a period, however short or long. Second, they appeal to people who are alarmed by an apparent fragmentation or breakdown of the social order" - p3
8) "moral guidelines are unclear" - p3
9) "Our moral repertoire has expanded enormously" - p5
10) "particular episodes of moral panic that this dichotomy of two spheres of moral discourse is too simplistic and does not take account of the ways in which the discourses of popular culture politics and professional agencies are often combined in the spiral that creates a moral panic" - p5
11) "There have been cultural changes - increased 'multiculturalism' in the broadest sense, fragmentation of cultures, and conflicts over identity, lifestyles and morals" - p140
12) "Moral panics are often symptoms of tensions and struggles over changes in cultural and moral regulation" - p142
1) "Newspaper deadlines continually warn of some new danger resulting in moral laxity" - p1
2) "moral panics are nothing new" - p1
3) "Almost anything can spark off a panic" - p2
4) "Contemporary panics seem to catch many ore people in their net" - p2
5) "seem to call into question the very institution of the family" - p2
6) "Britain is not alone in having moral panics they seem to be increasingly frequent in modern societies as we approach the millennium" - p2
7) "points relevant to understanding the phenomenon of moral panics. Th first is that they take the form of campaigns (crusades), which are sustained over a period, however short or long. Second, they appeal to people who are alarmed by an apparent fragmentation or breakdown of the social order" - p3
8) "moral guidelines are unclear" - p3
9) "Our moral repertoire has expanded enormously" - p5
10) "particular episodes of moral panic that this dichotomy of two spheres of moral discourse is too simplistic and does not take account of the ways in which the discourses of popular culture politics and professional agencies are often combined in the spiral that creates a moral panic" - p5
11) "There have been cultural changes - increased 'multiculturalism' in the broadest sense, fragmentation of cultures, and conflicts over identity, lifestyles and morals" - p140
12) "Moral panics are often symptoms of tensions and struggles over changes in cultural and moral regulation" - p142
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