Media language matters because many people first learn about a disabled person's death through a headline, not a report. That headline can either reveal injustice or reduce the person to a burden, tragedy or problem.
Media language and disabled lives
How public language can preserve personhood or reduce disabled people to burden, tragedy, vulnerability or spectacle.
This page discusses media framing of disabled people, abuse, homicide and institutional harm.
This page uses public records and careful secondary sources only. It avoids unnecessary graphic detail and does not treat any person as a case study.
Why this record matters
This archive does not police every word. It asks whether language keeps responsibility visible. Who acted? Who failed? Who was harmed? Who is being centred?
What the public record shows
The Equality and Human Rights Commission's Hidden in Plain Sight inquiry examined disability related harassment and how public authorities respond. It is a useful source because the phrase hidden in plain sight captures the wider problem of harm that is visible but not properly recognised.
Disability Day of Mourning exists to remember disabled people killed by family members or caregivers. It also challenges public narratives that excuse or soften those deaths by focusing on the killer's burden rather than the disabled person's life.
For this archive, media language is part of the system. It shapes whether the public sees a person, a problem, a victim, a burden, a scandal or a human being whose rights mattered.
Timeline
The headline arrives first
Public understanding can be shaped before people read the full findings.
Words assign responsibility
Words such as vulnerable, burden, complex or tragedy can either explain context or hide accountability.
The person's life must remain visible
The archive should not remember only the failure. It should remember that someone lived first.
Patterns shown
Burden narrative
Disabled people can be described through the pressure placed on others instead of their own life and rights.
Passive voice
Harm can be made vague when records say mistakes happened instead of naming who did what.
Scandal framing
A scandal frame can create outrage but still fail to explain the structure.
Awareverse reading
Sources