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Ethics in Journalism

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Title: Ethics in Journalism


1
Ethics in Journalism
  • Jarrett Wilson
  • Yeovil College Chaplaincy Adviser

2
Scenario 1
  • Your team are putting together a documentary
    about climate change and the deadline set by your
    funding source and the BBC is fast-approaching.
    Each of you on the team have a passion to see
    people informed about the dangers of climate
    change, and so youre working to piece together
    scientific studies with interviews from some of
    the most high-profile climatologists around the
    world. One of your team is sent a report via
    email from a significant climate change research
    organisation, detailing the most recent findings
    off the coast of Antarctica. In her email the
    scientist also writes, the data may seem
    inconclusive, but we think its more likely that
    climate change is affecting the ice in Antarctica
    than not. If you accentuate certain details of
    the report and not others, you can make a good,
    convincing case that climate change is
    happening.
  • What is your response? You are passionate about
    what you are reporting and this report could be
    the best contribution you have for your
    documentary. Do you accentuate certain elements
    of the report and dumb-down the parts that
    dont fit with your theory? If you dont dumb it
    down you are worried that people might not
    believe how important climate change is, and each
    of you really believe it to be a threat to
    mankind. Can you afford not to play down the
    parts that may affect your theory?

3
Scenario 2
  • Your team is responsible for putting together a
    weekly political debate programme. The area you
    are filming in has a small majority of people who
    voted for a neo-Nazi political party, and who
    narrowly elected one of their members into
    Parliament at the last general election. If you
    do not invite him onto your panel, you are
    concerned that the public will think youre not
    reporting fairly, which might cause some people
    to have sympathy for this racist and xenophobic
    political party. However, if you do invite him
    on, your team is concerned that even more people
    will be vulnerable to this political partys
    extremist message.
  • What do you do? Do you allow the political
    representative onto your programme, or not? How
    do you explain your actions to the public if you
    do invite him on? How will you explain your
    actions if you dont?

4
Scenario 3
  • A Palestinian member of your news team gets
    caught in the crossfire between Israeli and
    Palestinian soldiers and begins to film the
    event. The camera catches a father and his son
    trying to take cover around the corner of a
    building. The footage, which lasts just over a
    minute, shows the pair holding onto each other,
    the boy crying and the father waving, then a
    burst of gunfire and dust, after which the boy is
    seen slumped across his father's legs. The
    footage is submitted to your news team back in
    the UK and your team member working from the
    Middle East informs you that the child was killed
    by Israeli gunfire.
  • What do you report? What will be the
    ramifications if you say that the child was
    killed by Israelis? Is your cameramans
    eyewitness enough to go on? Should you trust his
    report?

5
Applied Ethics
  • What is the morally correct approach?
  • Utilitarianism
  • Virtue Ethics
  • Casuistry
  • Is there such a thing as objectivity?

6
BBCs Editorial Guidelineshttp//www.bbc.co.uk/gu
idelines/editorialguidelines/edguide/editorialvalu
es/
  • Truth Accuracy
  • Impartiality Diversity of Opinion
  • Editorial Integrity Independence
  • Serving the Public Interest
  • Fairness
  • Privacy
  • Harm Offence
  • Children
  • Accountability

7
Rows with the BBC
  • Gaza Appeal
  • Jonathan Ross/Russell Brand
  • British National Party
  • Accusations of left-wing bias

8
Documentaries
  • Based around events
  • Based around people
  • Based around problems in society/the world
  • Topical

9
Ethical Dilemmas
  • Docu-dramas
  • Shock-umentaries
  • Information/Entertainment fusion
  • Clever editing
  • Music Emotion

10
Ethical Journalism?
11
Channel 4 controversies
  • Ahmadinejads Christmas speech
  • Faith-based documentaries
  • True Stories

12
Harm Limitation Principle
  • Show compassion for those who may be affected
    adversely by news coverage. Use special
    sensitivity when dealing with children and
    inexperienced sources or subjects.
  • Be sensitive when seeking or using interviews or
    photographs of those affected by tragedy or
    grief.
  • Recognize that gathering and reporting
    information may cause harm or discomfort. Pursuit
    of the news is not a license for arrogance.
  • Recognize that private people have a greater
    right to control information about themselves
    than do public officials and others who seek
    power, influence or attention. Only an overriding
    public need can justify intrusion into anyone's
    privacy.
  • Show good taste. Avoid pandering to lurid
    curiosity.
  • Be cautious about identifying juvenile suspects
    or victims of sex crimes.
  • Be judicious about naming criminal suspects
    before the formal filing of charges.
  • Balance a criminal suspect's fair trial rights
    with the public's right to be informed.

13
  • THANK YOU!
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