There was once a saying that girls were made from sugar, spice, and everything nice; however, today’s female youth would hardly fit that description in accordance with the views of law enforcement agencies, politicians, community members, and the media. According to these sources, the female youth is made of aggression, violent behaviour, and sexual indecencies that would explain the reason for the increasing conflict the female youth is having with the justice system.
Female youth who come into conflict with the law have recently received a large amount of attention from the media, academics, and policy-makers. While the media portray a stereotype of the "new violent girl", academics argue over how we should study, research, …show more content…
Moral panic is what follows once the readers have fallen privy to the decontextualized text they have read as presented by the media. A moral panic typically focuses on evildoers – or supposed evil doers how come to be defined as the enemy of society. Therefore, in the eyes of the moral entrepreneurs, these deviants deserve public hostility and punishment. Moral panic occurs when a substantial portion of society feels that particular evildoers pose a threat to the moral order of society. Usually, it is through increased public hostility, more laws, more control, more police, more arrests, and more prison cells as well as other efforts that the “moral order” is to be re-established or held in check (Burns, …show more content…
In Virk’s case, media reports drew attention around the idea that Virk was flirting with one of the girl’s boyfriends and apparently also stole her day planner. However, to trivialize this type of small incident as motive for murder misses the point of the reality in which girls commit violent acts of crime. It also, supports the media’s motives for decontextualizing the actuality and true source behind the emergence of girl’s violent