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Fuelling the Fire: The effects of Instagram discourse about farm attacks on levels of fear of crime and victimisation

Farm attacks are a contentious issue in South African crime discourse. 1 Despite having similar characteristics to home invasions or hijackings in urban areas, popular and academic narratives around farm attacks are woven with broader concerns relating to identity politics, land restitution, minorit...

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Main Author: Matai, Dhiya
Other Authors: Van Der Spuy, Elrena
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Public Law 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Matai, Dhiya
author2 Van Der Spuy, Elrena
author_browse Matai, Dhiya
Van Der Spuy, Elrena
author_facet Van Der Spuy, Elrena
Matai, Dhiya
author_sort Matai, Dhiya
collection Thesis
description Farm attacks are a contentious issue in South African crime discourse. 1 Despite having similar characteristics to home invasions or hijackings in urban areas, popular and academic narratives around farm attacks are woven with broader concerns relating to identity politics, land restitution, minority rights, ethnic solidarity, and labour relations.2 This type of crime seems to exist at the intersection of competing claims and contentions in rural spaces that have struggled to keep pace with the transformation process in the post-Apartheid context.3 While there is little evidence to suggest that farm attacks are politically motivated, discourse (especially in the media) can often paint the problem as a profoundly political one. The discrepancy between the realities of the cases and the popular interpretation of the issue shows us that there is a particular way in which stories about these attacks are being told that imbues them with further meaning. In this study, I analysed how farm attacks are constructed on Instagram accounts that post about rural crime and agricultural issues. These accounts report to a younger generation of mainly white South Africans who are concerned about these attacks; the accounts thus have the power to control the narratives and construct meanings and understandings of the crime. By using a qualitative methodology and content analysis, I dissected over ninety posts to examine whether these accounts were feeding into the fear of crime and victimisation in relation to farm attacks. The research showed that by posting certain graphic images and incendiary language, Instagram accounts are partially responsible for adding fuel to the fire around farm attacks. I argue that these accounts are ultimately counter-productive in gaining attention for victims of these crimes because of the divisive and hostile ways in which they engage the issue. Rural safety needs to be taken seriously, and for this to happen, the narratives need to be divested of the racism and vitriol that so often features in discussions about farm attacks.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39636 Fuelling the Fire: The effects of Instagram discourse about farm attacks on levels of fear of crime and victimisation Matai, Dhiya Van Der Spuy, Elrena Kinnes Irvin Criminology, Law and Society Farm attacks are a contentious issue in South African crime discourse. 1 Despite having similar characteristics to home invasions or hijackings in urban areas, popular and academic narratives around farm attacks are woven with broader concerns relating to identity politics, land restitution, minority rights, ethnic solidarity, and labour relations.2 This type of crime seems to exist at the intersection of competing claims and contentions in rural spaces that have struggled to keep pace with the transformation process in the post-Apartheid context.3 While there is little evidence to suggest that farm attacks are politically motivated, discourse (especially in the media) can often paint the problem as a profoundly political one. The discrepancy between the realities of the cases and the popular interpretation of the issue shows us that there is a particular way in which stories about these attacks are being told that imbues them with further meaning. In this study, I analysed how farm attacks are constructed on Instagram accounts that post about rural crime and agricultural issues. These accounts report to a younger generation of mainly white South Africans who are concerned about these attacks; the accounts thus have the power to control the narratives and construct meanings and understandings of the crime. By using a qualitative methodology and content analysis, I dissected over ninety posts to examine whether these accounts were feeding into the fear of crime and victimisation in relation to farm attacks. The research showed that by posting certain graphic images and incendiary language, Instagram accounts are partially responsible for adding fuel to the fire around farm attacks. I argue that these accounts are ultimately counter-productive in gaining attention for victims of these crimes because of the divisive and hostile ways in which they engage the issue. Rural safety needs to be taken seriously, and for this to happen, the narratives need to be divested of the racism and vitriol that so often features in discussions about farm attacks. 2024-05-17T09:43:07Z 2024-05-17T09:43:07Z 2023 2024-05-17T07:26:45Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39636 eng application/pdf Department of Public Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Criminology, Law and Society
Matai, Dhiya
Fuelling the Fire: The effects of Instagram discourse about farm attacks on levels of fear of crime and victimisation
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Fuelling the Fire: The effects of Instagram discourse about farm attacks on levels of fear of crime and victimisation
title_full Fuelling the Fire: The effects of Instagram discourse about farm attacks on levels of fear of crime and victimisation
title_fullStr Fuelling the Fire: The effects of Instagram discourse about farm attacks on levels of fear of crime and victimisation
title_full_unstemmed Fuelling the Fire: The effects of Instagram discourse about farm attacks on levels of fear of crime and victimisation
title_short Fuelling the Fire: The effects of Instagram discourse about farm attacks on levels of fear of crime and victimisation
title_sort fuelling the fire the effects of instagram discourse about farm attacks on levels of fear of crime and victimisation
topic Criminology, Law and Society
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39636
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