Wednesday, 20 November 2013

Considering Ethics for Anyone Who Commits Acts of Journalism



Considering Ethics for Anyone Who Commits Acts of Journalism

Right now there are three major efforts under way to rethink journalism ethics for our changed media landscape. The Online News Association and the Society for Professional Journalists have both launched ethics discussions with their members, and the Poynter Institute recently published a majorbook on "The New Ethics of Journalism."

Poynter is using the occasion of the book to jump-start a broader conversation about truth and trust in the 21st century, the first event of which happened this week in New York City. Sponsored by PBS MediaShift, craigconnects, the Ford FoundationAmerican University's School of Communication andNewsCred, the event featured a panel of journalists and academics from the New York Times, BuzzFeed, Huffington Post, NYU, AP, and the Seattle Times. There were some great discussions on sponsored content, the nature of truth versus facts, and the intersection of reporting, opinion and activism. But I won't get into those here. Instead, I want to talk about the one theme that seemed to undergird the entire evening: journalism's relationship with its community.

http://www.pbs.org/mediashift/2013/11/considering-ethics-for-anyone-who-commits-acts-of-journalism/

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