ABSTRACT

This fully updated second edition of the popular handbook provides an exploration of thinking on media ethics, bringing together the intellectual history of global mass media ethics over the past 40 years, summarising existing research and setting future agenda grounded in philosophy and social science.

This second edition offers up-to-date and comprehensive coverage of media ethics, including the ethics of sources, social media, the roots of law in ethics, and documentary film. The wide range of contributors include scholars and former professionals who worked as journalists, public relations professionals, and advertising practitioners. They lay out both a good grounding from which to begin more in-depth and individualized explorations, and extensive bibliographies for each chapter to aid that process.

For students and professionals who seek to understand and do the best work possible, this book will provide both insight and direction. Standing apart in its comprehensive coverage, The Routledge Handbook of Mass Media Ethics is required reading for scholars, graduate students, and researchers in media, mass communication, journalism, ethics, and related areas.

part I|98 pages

Foundations

part II|192 pages

Professional Practice

chapter 8|14 pages

Truth and Objectivity

chapter 9|18 pages

Photojournalism Ethics

A 21st-Century Primal Dance of Behavior, Technology, and Ideology

chapter 10|15 pages

Diversity Requires Ethics Change

chapter 11|15 pages

The Ethics of Advocacy

Moral Reasoning in the Practice of Public Relations

chapter 13|29 pages

Exploring Latin American Advertising Ethics

Legislation and Self-Regulation

chapter 16|18 pages

Violence

chapter 18|12 pages

What Can We Get Away With?

The Ethics of Art and Entertainment in the Neoliberal World

chapter 19|15 pages

Culture Is Normative

part III|97 pages

Concrete Issues

chapter 21|13 pages

Transparency in Journalism

Meanings, Merits, and Risks

chapter 24|18 pages

Peace Journalism

part IV|121 pages

Institutional Considerations

chapter 27|14 pages

Buddhist Moral Ethics

Intend No Harm, Intend to Be of Benefit

chapter 28|15 pages

Communitarianism

chapter 29|20 pages

Feminist Media Ethics

chapter 32|17 pages

The Media in Evil Circumstances

chapter 33|14 pages

Ethical Tensions in News Making

What Journalism Has in Common with Other Professions