Abstract

This article focusses on the common use of the term “no-go-areas” in German mass media and politics since 2011. On the basis of theoretical and empirical approaches we examine which forms of this spatial term have been established and which linkages between mass media and politics exist in this case. Despite the different communication strategies of mass media and politics, we recognized parallels in the way they deal with the topic: “no-go-areas” were mostly discussed as places of ethnicized crime. Similar references are made to both affected and responsible members of society.

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