Home > Crime and Punishment in America > Media
Media
- History of the media and the courts
- Tried in the media
- The crime of the century
- Cameras in the courtroom
- Detectives and the courtroom as entertainment
- Movies, radio, and television
- True crime
- The modern media and sensational trials
- The O.J. Simpson Case
- Unanswered questions
- For More Information
Criminal trials, by their very nature, are public events. Prosecuting attorneys are public officers of the court, judges are often elected officials, and juries who decide...
[The entire page is 4267 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Colonial Period
- The Early Years of American Law
- Modern Criminal Justice
- Violent Crime: Crime Against a Person
- Crimes Against Property
- White-Collar Crime
- Organized Crime
- Public Order Crimes
- Environmental Crime
- Terrorism
- Cyber Crime
- Causes of Crime
- Crime Victims
- Policing
- Crime Laboratories
- Criminal Courts
- Corrections
- Military and Native American Criminal Justice
- Juvenile Justice
- Children's Rights
- School Violence
- Moral and Religious Influences
- Economic and Social Effects of Crime
- Race and Ethnicity
- Media
