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Media Ethics Patrick Lee Plaisance

Media Ethics By Patrick Lee Plaisance

Media Ethics by Patrick Lee Plaisance


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Summary

Media Ethics is an accessible yet philosophically grounded volume explaining key ethical principles and their application in print and broadcast journalism, public relations, and marketing.

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Media Ethics Summary

Media Ethics: Key Principles for Responsible Practice by Patrick Lee Plaisance

Making ethics accessible and applicable to media practice, Media Ethics: Key Principles for Responsible Practice explains key ethical principles and their application in print and broadcast journalism, public relations, advertising, and media-based marketing. Unlike application-oriented case books, this text sets forth the philosophical underpinnings of key principles and explains how each should guide responsible media behavior. It avoids moralizing and instead emphasizes the deliberative nature of ethics, inviting students to grapple with ethical dilemmas on their own and presenting ethical theory in a way designed to enrich classroom discussion. Author Patrick Lee Plaisance synthesizes classical and contemporary ethics in an accessible way to help students ask the right questions and develop their critical reasoning skills, both as media consumers and media professionals of the future.

Key Features

- Provides students with a much-needed foundation in ethical theory, offering solid coverage of the ethical principles important to the decisions of media professionals and the judgments of media consumers

- Devotes chapter-length coverage to central philosophical principles widely referred to in the media ethics literature and in professional codes of ethics- transparency, autonomy, privacy, harm, community, and justice-and places them in the context of media practice

- Includes more than three dozen relevant, up-to-date media cases and examples (such as the use of sex in advertising and policies for journalists covering suicide stories) that illustrate the relevance of key principles to the work of journalism, public relations, and advertising

- Presents the innovative MERITS (Multidimensional Ethical Reasoning and Inquiry Task Sheet) model to help students apply the book's six key principles to ethical issues

- Synthesizes theories from a wide range of disciplines, including mass communication research on media sociology and audience effects, as well as philosophy and sociology

- Applies ethics theory to the online world to illustrate that ethical values don't change with the medium, nor should they be driven by technology

Media Ethics: Key Principles for Responsible Practice is ideal for use as a core text in courses such as media ethics, critical perspectives on media, media studies, journalism ethics, and communication ethics in departments of journalism, mass communication, media studies, communication studies, and public communication.

Media Ethics Reviews

"This book, more than any other media ethics textbook currently available, treats students as the intellectually curious, philosophically aware, and ethically motivated individuals that we hope them to be. As one brings one's own wisdom to the reading with the understanding that there is more to learn, this is one of those rare books that has the potential to keep on giving to professors and to students." -- Deni Elliott

About Patrick Lee Plaisance

Patrick Lee Plaisance (Ph.D. Syracuse University) is an associate professor in the Department of Journalism and Technical Communication at Colorado State University, where he teaches media ethics, reporting, and mass communication theory at the undergraduate and graduate levels. His primary research areas include media ethics, moral psychology, virtue ethics, journalistic values, and newsroom socialization. His work has focused on analyzing how ethics theory can be more effectively brought to bear on media practice, and he has conducted qualitative and quantitative social-science research on journalistic decision making. He worked for nearly 15 years as a journalist at newspapers around the country, including papers in Los Angeles, south Florida, New Jersey, and Virginia. He has contributed chapters and case studies to numerous journalism and media ethics books and has published more than a dozen peer-reviewed articles in journals including Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Communication Research, Journal of Mass Media Ethics, Communication Theory, and many others. He is also the author of the book Virtue in Media: The Moral Psychology of Excellence in News & PR.

Table of Contents

1. Ethics Theory: An Overview Ethics defined Key thinkers through the ages Idealism and relativism Means and ends Intents and consequences For discussion 2. Ethics Theory: Application to Media Ethics versus wrongdoing Values in the media A checklist for ethical reasoning Perceptions of bias in the media Media ethics in cyberspace For discussion 3. Transparency Trust and secrecy Transparency as respect Kant: The 'principle of humanity' Kant: The 'theory of human dignity' Transparency and the media Transparency in cyberspace For Discussion 4. Justice Concepts of justice Rawls and utilitarianism Rawls and 'A Theory of Justice' Power of Rawlsian justice Value of Rawls for ethics Justice as fairness in the media Justice in cyberspace For discussion 5. Harm What constitutes 'harm'? 'Harm' as culturally bound concept Understanding 'harm' in the media 'Harm' more precisely defined Mill's harm principle Harm in cyberspace When concern for harm and other duties conflict For discussion 6. Autonomy Freedom and autonomy Autonomy as 'positive' freedom Moral autonomy Autonomy and 'natural law' Autonomous agency and the media Journalistic independence Autonomy for PR professionals Autonomy in cyberspace For discussion 7. Privacy Privacy defined The moral value of privacy The history of privacy Privacy in the media Privacy in cyberspace For discussion 8. Community Defining community Philosophical roots of 'community' Communitarian theory Community: A feminist priority John Dewey and community The idea of the public sphere Community and journalism Community and public relations Community and advertising Community in cyberspace For discussion Conclusion Theories of moral development Implications of a universal moral theory Media ethics in cyberspace

Additional information

CIN1412956854G
9781412956857
1412956854
Media Ethics: Key Principles for Responsible Practice by Patrick Lee Plaisance
Used - Good
Paperback
SAGE Publications Inc
2008-11-18
280
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Media Ethics