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Streaming Justice: True Crime and Wrongful Conviction in the Streaming Age

Edited by: Greg Stratton

ISBN13: 9783032161482
Published: April 2026
Publisher: Springer-Verlag
Country of Publication: Switzerland
Format: Hardback
Price: £99.99



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This book examines the relationship between true crime and wrongful conviction in the age of streaming content. True crime plays a vital role in informing, entertaining, and developing public expectations surrounding justice. During the streaming era, true crime has emerged as a profitable option for content producers, leading to a form of engaged fandom entwined in the narratives of victims and criminals. The book is a culmination of research and analysis into the role of true crime in raising public awareness of narratives of wrongful conviction. It examines the effects on audience participation in seeking justice through digital enabled opportunities like crowd-sourcing, websleuthing, and online activism.

  • Examination of true crime and the implications of its production in a streaming world
  • Prioritising the voices of the subjects of wrongful conviction focused productions
  • The opportunity to place true crime and audience reception within the scope of digital criminology

Subjects:
Criminology, Law and Society
Contents:
Chapter 1. Introducing Streaming Justice
Chapter 2. True Crime in the digital age: Setting the scene for wrongful conviction
Chapter 3. Netflix, Making a Murderer and streaming justice
Chapter 4. Online Fandom: Justice seeking, misinformation, and disinformation
Chapter 5. Is it about the innocent? User-created content, video-sharing and the evolution of justice vlogging
Chapter 6. The influencers of innocence: TikTokification, social media influencers, and true crime
Chapter 7. Streaming the celebrification of the innocent
Chapter 8. Experiences of streaming: Participating in true crime
Chapter 9. Experiences of innocence advocates with true crime
Chapter 10. Conclusion: Justice swimming up the stream