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Global media ethics [[electronic resource] ] : problems and perspectives / / edited by Stephen J.A. Ward
Global media ethics [[electronic resource] ] : problems and perspectives / / edited by Stephen J.A. Ward
Pubbl/distr/stampa Chichester, West Sussex, U.K., : Wiley-Blackwell, 2013
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (342 p.)
Disciplina 174/.907
Altri autori (Persone) WardStephen J. A <1951-> (Stephen John Anthony)
Soggetto topico Journalistic ethics
Mass media - Moral and ethical aspects
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-299-15910-9
1-118-35985-2
1-118-35982-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Machine generated contents note: Introduction: Media Ethics as Global Stephen Ward, University of Wisconsin-Madison Section One: Media ethics worldwide 1. Why Media Ethics Still Matters Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths, University of London 2. Universals and Differences in Global Journalism Ethics Thomas Hanitzsch, Patrick Lee Plaisance, and Elizabeth A. Skewes 3. The Only Way is Ethics: The Role of the Journalist in Reporting International Conflicts Howard Tumber, City University, London 4. Global Journalism Networks: Funding and Ethical Hurdles Brant Houston, University of Illinois Section Two: Media and diverse public spheres 5. Contextual Ethics and Arab Mass Media Ralph Berenger & Mustafa Taha, American University in Sharjah, UAE 6. From Journalism Ethics to an Ethics of Citizenship: Evidence from Colombia Hernando Rojas and Tim Macafee, University of Wisconsin-Madison 7. Media Ethics in a New Democracy: South African Perspectives on Freedom, Dignity and Citizenship Herman Wasserman, Rhodes University, South Africa 8. Democratization by Boilerplate: National Media, International Norms, and Sovereign National Building in a Post-War Liberia Jo Ellen Fair, University of Wisconsin-Madison Section Three: Global issues 9. The Role of Global Media in Telling the Climate Change Story Sharon Dunwoody and Magda Konieczna, University of Wisconsin-Madison 10. Ethics of Global Disaster Reporting: Journalistic Witnessing and Objectivity Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Cardiff School of Journalism and Mervi Pantti, University of Helsinki 11. Affective Expertise: The Journalism Ethics of Celebrity Sourcing Katherine Bell, University of Washington, Seattle 12. Global Media Ethics, Justice, and Indian Journalism Shakuntala Rao, State University of New York, Plattsburgh Section Four: Theoretical foundations 13. Global Media Ethics? Issues, Requirements, Challenges, Resolutions Charles Ess, Aarhus University, Denmark 14. Global Ethics and the Problem of Relativism Clifford Christians, University of Illinois-Urbana 15. Global Media Ethics: Utopian or Realistic? Stephen J. A. Ward, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910463335803321
Chichester, West Sussex, U.K., : Wiley-Blackwell, 2013
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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Handbook of global media ethics / / Stephen J.A. Ward, editor
Handbook of global media ethics / / Stephen J.A. Ward, editor
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cham, Switzerland : , : Springer, , [2021]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (1450 pages)
Disciplina 175
Soggetto topico Mass media - Moral and ethical aspects
Mitjans de comunicació de massa
Ètica
Objectivitat
Soggetto genere / forma Llibres electrònics
ISBN 3-319-32103-X
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- About the Editors -- About the Authors -- Part I: Introduction to Part I: Concepts and Problems -- Chapter 1: What Is Global Media Ethics? -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Preliminary Definitions -- 1.2.1 What Is Ethics? -- 1.2.2 Media Ethics -- 1.3 Global Media Ethics -- 1.3.1 The Starting Point -- 1.3.2 Four Types of Inquiry -- 1.4 Why a Global Media Ethics? -- 1.4.1 Radical Rethinking -- 1.4.2 Adopting Moral Globalism -- 1.4.3 What Would Change? -- 1.4.4 How to Realize? -- 1.4.5 Realistic Expectations -- References -- Chapter 2: Is Global Media Ethics Utopian? -- 2.1 The Charge of Utopianism: Objections -- 2.1.1 What Is the Charge of Utopianism? -- 2.1.2 Objection #1: The Project Is Practically Utopian -- 2.1.3 Objection #2: The Project Is Normatively Utopian -- 2.1.4 Objection #3: Moral Globalism Is Undesirable in a Global World. -- 2.2 Responses -- 2.2.1 Principle of Supremacy Questioned -- 2.2.2 Universalism and Cultural Relativism -- 2.2.3 Problems of Cultural Relativism -- 2.2.4 Abstract Universalism? -- 2.3 Going Global -- 2.3.1 Stage 1: Injecting Ideas into Public Discourse -- 2.3.2 Stage 2: Codifying the Principles -- 2.3.3 Stage 3: Completion of the Ethics Revolution -- References -- Chapter 3: Political Emotions and Global Ethics -- 3.1 Moderate Patriotism -- 3.2 Nussbaum's Theory of Emotions -- 3.2.1 Cognitive Theory of Emotions -- 3.3 Parochial Emotions -- 3.3.1 Summary -- 3.4 Political Emotions -- 3.5 How to Teach Liberal Patriotism? -- 3.6 Critiquing Nussbaum -- 3.6.1 Logical Worries -- 3.6.2 Normative Worries -- 3.6.3 Priority of Global Emotions -- 3.7 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 4: Media Business Ethics, Corporate Social Responsibility, and Governance -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.1.1 Media Business Ethics Lapses Are Frequent -- 4.1.2 Supporting Ethical Behavior in Media Companies -- 4.2 Conclusions.
References -- Chapter 5: Do Journalists Share Universal Values? -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Influences from a Comparative Perspective -- 5.3 Critiques of Global Approaches to Ethics -- 5.4 Understanding and Comparing Ethical Ideologies -- 5.5 Views on Specific Ethical Challenges -- 5.5.1 Payment for Information -- 5.5.2 (Self-)Censorship -- 5.5.3 Ethics of Peace: Minimizing Violence -- 5.6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6: Ignored but Not Forgotten: Global Issues in Ethical Codes -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 The Nature of Ethical Codes -- 6.3 In Quest of Universals -- 6.4 Analytical Approach -- 6.5 The Codes and the Global -- 6.5.1 Universalism -- 6.5.2 Equality -- 6.5.3 Human Rights -- 6.5.4 Peace -- 6.5.5 Development, Environment -- 6.6 Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 7: The Role and Purpose of Ombudsmen in a Global Media World -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 The Role: What Does an Ombudsman Do? -- 7.3 The Role of Ombudsmen in Emerging Democracies -- 7.4 The History of News Ombudsmen -- 7.5 The Challenge and the Future -- 7.6 Building a Better Ombudsman -- References -- Chapter 8: A New Perspective on Ethical Reporting About Suicide -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Forum's Approach -- 8.3 The Trojan Effect -- 8.4 Suicide Recommendations Overhaul -- 8.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 9: Beyond the News and Opinion Dichotomy -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Facts and Opinions -- 9.3 Challenging Facts, Debasing Objectivity -- 9.4 Old Norms, New Errancies -- 9.5 Reassessing "Facts vs Opinions" -- 9.6 Material Facts -- 9.7 Analysis -- 9.8 Knowledge -- 9.9 Educated Guesses -- 9.10 Comments -- 9.11 Deceit -- 9.12 Errors and Lies -- 9.13 Reality Is Sacred -- References -- Chapter 10: Digital Religion and Global Media: Flows, Communities, and Radicalizations -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Digital Religion -- 10.3 Global Flows of Religious Communication.
10.4 Religious Communities in a Global World -- 10.5 Global Religious Extremism: Understanding Online Extremism and Hate -- 10.6 Conclusion -- References -- Part I -- Further Reading -- Part II: Introduction to Part II: Approaches and Methods -- Approaches to Major Issues -- Theoretical Approaches -- Chapter 11: A Feminist Ethics for Journalism -- 11.1 Section 1: The Emergence and Development of Feminist Ethics -- 11.1.1 Lesbian Ethics -- 11.1.2 Black Womanist Ethics -- 11.2 Section 2: Revisions of the Ethics of Care -- 11.3 Section 3: The Relevance of Feminist Standpoint Epistemology -- 11.3.1 Feminist Research Ethics -- 11.4 Section 4: Feminist Ethics for Journalists -- 11.4.1 Representation as an Ethical Issue -- 11.4.2 Feminist Ethics and the Workplace -- 11.5 Section 5: The Global Potential of Feminist Media Ethics -- References -- Chapter 12: Cosmopolitanism as Ground for Global Media Ethics -- 12.1 Section 1: The Decisive Decision-Globalism or Parochialism? -- 12.1.1 Our Parochial and Global Selves -- 12.1.2 The Question of Priority -- 12.2 Section 2: Globalism as Cosmopolitanism -- 12.2.1 Cosmopolitanism and Global Issues -- 12.2.2 Expanding the Circle of Concern -- 12.2.3 Criticisms and Misunderstandings -- 12.2.3.1 Cosmopolitanism Is Too Abstract -- 12.2.3.2 Cosmopolitanism Ignores or Denies Parochial Values -- 12.2.3.3 Universalism and "Local" Ethics -- 12.2.3.4 The "Duty to Nation" Arguments -- 12.2.3.5 The Disanalogy Arguments -- 12.2.3.6 The Tolerance Argument -- 12.3 Section 3: Cosmopolitanism and Human Flourishing -- 12.3.1 The Human Good -- 12.3.2 Four Levels of the Human Good -- 12.3.3 Application to Global Media -- 12.3.4 Journalism and the Four Levels -- 12.3.4.1 Individual Goods -- 12.3.4.2 Social Goods -- 12.3.4.3 Political Goods -- 12.3.4.4 Goods of Justice -- 12.3.5 Conclusion -- References.
Chapter 13: Avoiding Imperialism: Merging the Global and the Local -- 13.1 Section 1-VDT: Content and Rationale -- 13.1.1 Culture: Reconceptualization -- 13.1.2 The Real and Symbolic: The Pull and Push Connection -- 13.1.3 Media Technology and Value Systems Reconstructed -- 13.1.4 The Good and Evil in Media -- 13.1.5 VDT and Ethics: A Global Comparative Understanding -- 13.2 Section 2-Communication and Ethics in Higher Education: From Parochial to Universal -- 13.2.1 Communication and Ethics Resources -- 13.2.1.1 Ethics in Programs' Contents -- 13.2.2 The Experience of the College of Communication, University of Sharjah -- 13.2.3 Ethical Theorizing -- 13.2.4 Constraints and Limitations of the Legal Environment -- 13.2.5 Case Studies -- 13.2.6 Ethical Universalism -- 13.3 Conclusion -- Appendix 1 -- References -- Chapter 14: Ethical Relativism, Pluralism, and Global Media Ethics -- 14.1 Section 1: From Monism and Ethical Relativism to Pluralism -- 14.2 Section 2: The Core Features of Global Media Ethics -- 14.3 Section 3: The Development of Global Media Ethics -- 14.4 Section 4: Reflective Theoretical Tools for Constructing Global Media Ethics -- 14.5 Section 5: Possibility and Progress of Global Media Ethics -- References -- Chapter 15: Moral Psychology in Media -- 15.1 Section 1: Emergence of Moral Psychology as a Field -- 15.2 Section 2: Moral Psychology Tools -- 15.2.1 Moral Development -- 15.2.2 Ethical Ideology -- 15.2.3 Moral Foundations -- 15.2.4 Other Frameworks and Instruments -- 15.2.5 Moral Ecology -- 15.2.6 Moral Psychology in Media Research -- 15.3 Section 3: Moral Psychology and Virtue Ethics -- 15.4 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 16: Algorithms and Media Ethics in the AI Age -- 16.1 Section 1: The Use of Algorithms in News Media -- 16.1.1 Algorithms for Data Mining -- 16.1.1.1 Story Discovery -- 16.1.1.2 Social Media Monitoring.
16.1.1.3 Prediction -- 16.1.2 Algorithms for News Production -- 16.1.2.1 News Writing -- 16.1.2.2 Data Visualization -- 16.1.2.3 Broadcasting -- 16.1.3 Algorithms for News Distribution -- 16.1.3.1 News Bots and Chat Bots -- 16.1.3.2 Personalization and Recommendation -- 16.1.3.3 Content Optimization -- 16.2 Section 2: Ethical Implications of AI Use in Journalism -- 16.2.1 Proposed Framework for Trustworthy AI for All Fields -- 16.2.2 Ethical Concerns About the Use of AI in Media -- 16.2.2.1 Reduced Human Agency -- 16.2.2.2 Reliability -- 16.2.2.3 Opacity and Accountability -- 16.2.2.4 Transparency -- 16.2.2.5 Privacy -- 16.3 Section 3: Transparency in the Use of Algorithms in News Media -- 16.3.1 Mapping the Ethics of Algorithms -- 16.3.2 Algorithmic Transparency in the News Media -- 16.3.3 Limitations of the Transparency Ideal -- 16.3.4 Approaches to Algorithmic Transparency -- 16.4 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 17: Pragmatic Objectivity for Global Ethics -- 17.1 Introduction -- 17.2 Section 1: Traditional News Objectivity -- 17.2.1 Out of Sync -- 17.3 Section 2: Naturalized Objectivity -- 17.3.1 Embedded Mind -- 17.3.2 Mapping Rationality and Objectivity -- 17.3.3 Situated Objectivity -- 17.3.4 Rationality: Wide and Deep -- 17.4 Section 3: Pragmatic Objectivity -- 17.4.1 The Stance -- 17.4.2 Applying the Stance: Standards -- 17.4.2.1 Generic Standards -- 17.4.2.2 Domain-Specific Standards -- 17.5 Section 4: Pragmatic Objectivity and Journalism -- 17.5.1 Pragmatic Objectivity and Global Journalism -- 17.5.2 Social Virtues of Objectivity -- References -- Chapter 18: Promoting the Human Good: The Dual Obligation Wisdom Theory and the Duties of Ethics -- 18.1 Introduction -- 18.2 Section 1: Universal Model for Evaluating the Normative Quality of Digital Information -- 18.2.1 The Inherent Normative Structure of Information and Knowledge.
18.2.2 Information and Universal Rights.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910497085303321
Cham, Switzerland : , : Springer, , [2021]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui