Search Agenda Signals
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Across Topics (55 results)
victims and their families are portrayed as morally central and silenced by elite-funded advocacy
Framing victims as central and protected within the justice process
Epstein victims framed as included and protected by police outreach
Victim survivors marginalized in narrative despite police appeal
Victims/survivors framed as central and invited to come forward
Victims downplayed in narrative emphasis
Survivors framed as central and encouraged to come forward
Victims and survivors framed as valid and central to the investigative process
Victims of police abuse framed as courageous and institutionally supported
Reference to Epstein trivializes harm to victims of sexual abuse
Survivors and alleged victims framed as entitled to protection and anonymity
Victims are being excluded from justice and comfort
Survivors of clerical abuse are framed as still marginalized in the redress process
Victims are portrayed as marginalized and failed by the system, deserving of inclusion and protection
Included / Protected
Epstein's victims are symbolically included and validated through institutional action
Centering victims’ families as morally legitimate and emotionally central
Victims and their families are portrayed as finally included in the justice process after prolonged exclusion
Families of victims are portrayed as finally being heard and acknowledged by the justice system
centers victims’ trauma and validates their emotional experience
Positions victims’ families as morally central and deserving of protection
Victims and their families are portrayed as included and validated through legal recognition
framed as being undermined and disrespected through exploitative tactics
Victims and their families portrayed as rightfully recognized after long struggle
Framing the rule of law as under threat from executive overreach
Current handball interpretation framed as lacking legitimacy despite technical compliance
The handball rule is framed as being in a state of crisis and confusion
Victim of image-based abuse portrayed as marginalized and targeted, with trauma downplayed in narrative weight
framed as deserving of protection from offensive humor
Survivors of intimate partner violence are framed as deserving legal recognition, protection, and access to justice
Child Victims Act framed as a crucial, positive enabler of delayed justice
the official record-keeping is subtly framed as biased or untrustworthy toward non-Victorian achievements
the legitimacy of the AFL/VFL record system is questioned due to regional bias
non-Victorian players are being marginalized in official records
Survivors framed as excluded and retraumatized by institutional failures
Hillsborough victims framed as excluded and failed by the government
Victims and their families framed as finally included and recognized through legal validation
victims' voices framed as being excluded from political reconciliation
Implied marginalisation of survivors by suggesting their trauma was mocked in promotional content
marginalising the victim's experience by underrepresenting her life and impact beyond family grief
EFL rules and commission are framed as legitimate and authoritative
Victims framed as excluded, dehumanized, and stripped of dignity
Victims' families are portrayed as finally being acknowledged and included in the justice process
Families portrayed as excluded and marginalized by the justice system
portrayed as being destabilized or internally conflicted
Jamaica is framed as being in a necessary and urgent crisis of postcolon游戏副本ial identity
Victims are portrayed as empowered and central to the justice process
Rule of law portrayed as collapsing under political pressure
Survivors are portrayed as morally justified and central to the narrative
Victims are framed as deserving of full support and inclusion in public policy
Victims and their families portrayed as deserving of recognition and closure
The victims are portrayed as deserving of recognition and protection, with emphasis on their suffering and identification of the perpetrator
marginalizes victims by centering the perpetrator’s final moments over their long-term suffering
American victims and their families framed as central and protected in national narrative
framed as a transnational ethnic community bound by blood and memory