ABSTRACT

The media informs, entertains, and connects us. It is woven into the fabric of politics. Its increasing immediacy has become an inescapable feature of almost everybody’s life. We are, at the same time, subject to the media and participants in it. The ethical questions it raises have never been more urgent. Trust is in short supply, but we need to share information while dealing with problems like misinformation, disinformation, and echo chambers. And what responsibilities fall on the state, and on other actors such as artists, advertisers, and social media users, as we reckon with endemic problems like racism, sexism, and classism?

The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy and Media Ethics is an outstanding survey and assessment of this vitally important field. Comprising thirty chapters written by an international team of contributors, the Handbook is divided into five parts:

  • Freedom of Speech, Privacy, and Censorship
  • The News Media
  • Broadening the Scope: Giving Other Aspects of the Media their Due
  • Justice, Power, and Representation
  • Vice and Virtue Online

The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy and Media Ethics is essential reading for students and researchers in philosophy, media and communication studies, politics, and law, as well as practising media professionals and journalists.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

part I|62 pages

Freedom of Speech, Privacy, and Censorship

chapter 2|13 pages

Privacy and the Media

chapter 4|13 pages

Academic Freedom and the Duty of Care

Reframing Media Coverage of Campus Controversies

part II|85 pages

The News Media

chapter 6|13 pages

Political Legitimacy and the News Media

Four Normative Models of the Political Role of the News Media

chapter 8|9 pages

The Death Knock

A Legitimate Journalistic Practice?

chapter 10|11 pages

Ethical Issues in Science Journalism

The Benefits of Reporting about Value-laden Judgements

chapter 11|12 pages

The Ethics of Media Interviewing

Asking Good Questions and Listening to the Answers

chapter 12|12 pages

What is the Public Interest in Crime News?

The Expressive Function of Newsworthiness

part III|60 pages

Broadening the Scope

chapter 13|12 pages

Complicity and Sports Journalism

chapter 14|12 pages

Satire and Stability

chapter 15|12 pages

The Art of Immoral Artists *

chapter 16|12 pages

Ethics of Advertising

part IV|77 pages

Justice, Power, and Representation

chapter 18|11 pages

Race and the Media

Beyond Defensiveness

chapter 19|13 pages

Tragedy and Inspiration

The Epistemic Injustice of Stereotypical Media Representations of Disability

chapter 20|12 pages

Women's Subordination, Objectification and Silencing

The Role of Pornography

chapter 22|12 pages

Class and Inequality

Why the Media Fails the Poor and Why This Matters

chapter 23|16 pages

Break the Long Lens of the Law!

From Police Propaganda to Movement Media

part V|84 pages

Vice and Virtue Online

chapter 24|12 pages

The Ethics of Social Media

Being Better Online

chapter 25|11 pages

Online Shaming's Invisible Harms

chapter 26|12 pages

The Only Reason to Do Anything

Online Trolling as the Deceptive Disruption of Joint Action

chapter 28|13 pages

Scrolling Towards Bethlehem

Conforming to Authoritarian Social Media Laws

chapter 29|9 pages

Keep Quiet Inside the Echo Chamber

The Ethics of Posting on Social Media