Image for Media Ethics

Media Ethics

Kieran, Matthew(Edited by)
See all formats and editions

Do journalists have a duty to be impartial and objective?

How should the public's right-to-know be balanced against an individual's right to privacy?

At a time when the role and responsibilities of the media have become an increasingly important part of public debate, Media Ethics brings together philosophers, media academics and journalists to discuss the pressing ethical and moral questions faced by the media and to examine the basic notions such as truth, virtue, privacy, rights, offence, harm and freedom which underlie them.

Media Ethics engages with debates about privacy and media intrusion, the ethics of political journalism, and the justification of censorship against the demands of freedom of expression.

The contributors' focus ranges from the close relationship between journalism and public relations, journalism and war and the use of military propaganda in the Gulf War, media portrayals of sex and violence, and photojournalism and the tabloid press.

Media Ethics includes a chapter by Martin Bell on responsible journalism and war reporting in Bosnia.

David Archard University of St. Andrews, UK Martin Bell Andrew Belsey University of Cardiff, UK Noel Carroll University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA, Ian Cram Universit

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£114.75 Save 15.00%
RRP £135.00
Product Details
Routledge
0415168376 / 9780415168373
Hardback
26/03/1998
United Kingdom
English
xv, 195p. : 1 ill.
25 cm
postgraduate /undergraduate Learn More