ABSTRACT

Do professions really place duty to society above clients' or their own interests? If not, how can they be trusted? While some public relations (PR) scholars claim that PR serves society and enhances the democratic process, others suggest that it is little more than propaganda, serving the interests of global corporations. This is not an argument about definitions, but about ethics - yet this topic is barely explored in texts and theories that seek to explain PR and its function in society.

This book places PR ethics in the wider context of professional ethics and the sociology of professions. By bringing together literature from fields beyond public relations - sociology, professional and philosophical ethics, and Jungian psychology - it integrates a new body of ideas into the debate. The unprecedented introduction of Jungian psychology to public relations scholarship shifts the debate beyond a traditional Western 'Good/Bad' ethical dichotomy towards a new holistic approach, with dynamic implications for theory and practice.

This thought-provoking book will be essential reading for students, academics and professionals with an interest in public relations, ethics and professionalism.

chapter 1|10 pages

Messy ethics

An introduction

chapter 2|25 pages

What's wrong with public relations ethics?

chapter 3|26 pages

Trust me, I'm a professional

chapter 4|28 pages

To serve society

chapter 6|26 pages

Into the psyche

chapter 7|25 pages

Towards a Jungian ethic

chapter 8|28 pages

Re-imagining professional ethics

chapter 9|23 pages

The shadow of excellence

chapter 10|12 pages

What next?

Reflections and directions