Media, 9/11, and fear: a national survey of Australian community responses to images of terror

The history, politics, and psychology of fear have had extensive press since the attack on the World Trade Center in New York by AI-Qaeda terrorists. Fear of any kind, as Robin (2002) points out, has the potential to reinforce unequal power relations. Identifying and exposing fear and its consequenc...

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Main Authors: Balnaves, Mark, Aly, Anne
Format: Journal Article
Published: University of Queensland 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/37607
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author Balnaves, Mark
Aly, Anne
author_facet Balnaves, Mark
Aly, Anne
author_sort Balnaves, Mark
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The history, politics, and psychology of fear have had extensive press since the attack on the World Trade Center in New York by AI-Qaeda terrorists. Fear of any kind, as Robin (2002) points out, has the potential to reinforce unequal power relations. Identifying and exposing fear and its consequences, empirically as well as politically, is essential to the democratic state, just as exposing bullies is essential to a safe schooling environment. Interestingly, however, there have been few measures of fear, for policy purposes, and explorations into exactly how afraid communities might have become after 9/7 7. In this paper, the authors report on a national survey of fear in Australia and how communities have reacted to terrorism messages.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-376072017-01-30T14:04:44Z Media, 9/11, and fear: a national survey of Australian community responses to images of terror Balnaves, Mark Aly, Anne terrorism media fear The history, politics, and psychology of fear have had extensive press since the attack on the World Trade Center in New York by AI-Qaeda terrorists. Fear of any kind, as Robin (2002) points out, has the potential to reinforce unequal power relations. Identifying and exposing fear and its consequences, empirically as well as politically, is essential to the democratic state, just as exposing bullies is essential to a safe schooling environment. Interestingly, however, there have been few measures of fear, for policy purposes, and explorations into exactly how afraid communities might have become after 9/7 7. In this paper, the authors report on a national survey of fear in Australia and how communities have reacted to terrorism messages. 2007 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/37607 University of Queensland fulltext
spellingShingle terrorism
media
fear
Balnaves, Mark
Aly, Anne
Media, 9/11, and fear: a national survey of Australian community responses to images of terror
title Media, 9/11, and fear: a national survey of Australian community responses to images of terror
title_full Media, 9/11, and fear: a national survey of Australian community responses to images of terror
title_fullStr Media, 9/11, and fear: a national survey of Australian community responses to images of terror
title_full_unstemmed Media, 9/11, and fear: a national survey of Australian community responses to images of terror
title_short Media, 9/11, and fear: a national survey of Australian community responses to images of terror
title_sort media, 9/11, and fear: a national survey of australian community responses to images of terror
topic terrorism
media
fear
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/37607