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Welch, M. (2000). Flag burning: Moral panic and the criminalization of protest. New York: Aldine de Gruyter. —— (2004). Quiet constructions in the war on terror: Subjecting asylum seekers to unnecessary detention. Social Justice, 31(1/2), 113–129. —— (2006a). Scapegoats of September 11th: Hate crimes and state crimes in the war on terror. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. ——(2006b). Seeking a safer society: America’s anxiety in the war on terror. Security Journal, 19(2), 93–109. —— (2007, February 14). Personal correspondence. Welch, M., Fenwick, M., & Roberts, M. (1997). Primary definitions of crime and moral panic: A content analysis of experts’ quotes in feature newspaper articles on crime. Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 34(4), 474–494. Welch, M., Price, E. A., & Yankey, N. (2002). Moral panic over youth violence: Wilding and the manufacture of menace in the media. Youth & Society, 34(1), 3–30. Wilson, G. (1996). Toward a revised framework for examining beliefs about the causes of poverty. Sociological Quarterly, 37(3), 413–428. Woodward, C. (2008, May 30). Ex-aide says he initially gave Bush benefit of doubt on war logic. Star-Ledger, p. A3. Young, J. (1971). The role of the police as amplifiers of deviance, negotiators of drug control as seen in Notting Hill. In S. Cohen (Ed.), Images of deviance (pp. 27–61). Harmondsworth, UK: Penguin Books. Zoepf, K., & Dagher, S. (2008, November 9). Iraq gives religious minorities fewer seats than the U.N. suggested. New York Times, p. A25. Bibliography 185 ...

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