Explanation
Discourse refers to structured systems of language, ideas, and knowledge through which societies interpret and organize reality. Discourses shape what can be said, thought, classified, and regarded as true within particular historical and social contexts.
The concept is especially associated with Michel Foucault, who argued that discourses are closely connected to power and social control. According to Foucault, institutions such as medicine, law, psychiatry, education, and criminology produce forms of knowledge that define what is considered normal, deviant, healthy, dangerous, or criminal.
Discourses therefore do not merely describe reality — they actively shape social categories, identities, and institutional practices.
In criminology and sociology, discourse analysis is used to examine:
- media representations of crime,
- moral panics and public fears,
- political debates on security and punishment,
- definitions of deviance,
- surveillance and risk discourses,
- and processes of stigmatization and exclusion.
Critical scholars emphasize that dominant discourses often reflect existing power relations. Certain groups may therefore be disproportionately represented as dangerous, criminal, or socially problematic.
Discourse-oriented approaches have become particularly influential in:
- critical criminology,
- cultural criminology,
- media criminology,
- poststructuralism,
- and studies of surveillance and governance.
Theoretical Reference
Discourse is associated with Michel Foucault, poststructuralism, critical theory, discourse analysis, social constructionism, and studies of power and knowledge.