Wednesday, August 2, 2017

Why reporters should stop using "predator"

Steven Yoder explains on his blog, Life on the List, why reporters should stop using the word "predator" when referring to people who have committed sex offenses.
In May, the AP Stylebook changed its guidelines for how reporters should refer to people with substance abuse problems. “Avoid words like alcoholicaddictuser and   abuser unless they are in quotations or names of organizations,” says the 2017 version. 
For those with addictions, that change won’t just shift how they’re portrayed but how they’re treated. A piece by Zachary Siegel in Slate last month noted that even veteran clinicians were more likely to recommend punitive measures for people described as “substance abusers” and rehab-oriented treatments for those referred to as “people with substance abuse disorders.” Even when people’s conditions are the result of personal choices, reporters avoid charged labels—that’s why those with diabetes aren’t described as “sugar abusers,” Siegel says. 
So it’s time for editors to stop letting reporters use “predator” in describing those who’ve committed sexual offenses.
Read the full essay at the Life on the List blog.

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