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PERSPECTIVES ON JOURNALISM ETHICS JRNL 6202 SUMMER II 2015 Instructor: Bill Mitchell 13 July 2015 | Northeastern Univ.

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Page 1: Class 2 jrnl 6202

PERSPECTIVES ON JOURNALISM ETHICS JRNL 6202 SUMMER II 2015

• Instructor: Bill Mitchell • 13 July 2015 | Northeastern Univ.

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PERSPECTIVES ON JOURNALISM ETHICS JRNL 6202 SUMMER II 2015

• Instructor: Bill Mitchell• Bmitch (at) gmail dot com• 727-641-9407• 13 July 2015 | Northeastern Univ.

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BRITTANY INTRO (ABOUT FIVE MINUTES)

3

• Who you are

• Why journalism in particular or media in general

• How you make ethical decisions

• try to sum it up in one word, and then elaborate

• Your sense of the state of media ethics

• one word followed by elaboration

• What you’re looking for from this class

• one word followed by elaboration

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WHAT WE’LL DO TONIGHT• Oral quiz/review of assigned readings

• Oral presentation of a couple of your blog posts

• 10 minute break (at about 7:30 p.m.)

• Review of ethical decision-making process

• Working a case

• Upcoming assignments, etc.

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PRELIMINARY WORK ON YOUR PERSONAL ETHICS GUIDELINES• Which of the four theories of ethics might be a starting

point for your personal guidelines?

• Research needed on one of its historical proponents

• What principles strike you as core to your approach?

• (In-class work as a resource for ongoing assignments)

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FOUR THEORIES OF ETHICS• Rule-based ethics

• Immanuel Kant, 18th Century German, deontology

• Kant’s Categorical imperative: “I ought never to act except in such a way that I can also will that my maxim should become universal law.”

• “…an attempt to legitimize the present model of distribution, where a minority believes that it has the right to consume in a way which can never be universalized.”

-- Pope Francis, Encyclical on the Environment, May 2015

• “On a Supposed Right to Tell Lies from Benevolent Motives”

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FOUR THEORIES OF ETHICS• Ends-based ethics

• Benthem, Mill, 17th/18th Century British, teleology

• Also known as utilitarianism or consequentialism

• Mill: Greatest happiness for greatest number of people

• Clear understanding of stakeholders vital to this theory

• Flexibility both the advantage and risk of this theory

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FOUR THEORIES OF ETHICS• The Golden Rule

• Confucious, 6th Century BCE China, & various religions

• Confucious’ idea of Benevolence at the heart of Reciprocity:• Respectfulness

• Tolerance

• Trustworthiness of word

• Quickness

• Generosity

• A limitation of the Golden Rule?

• With multiple stakeholders, which ones should benefit from application of the rule?

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FOUR THEORIES OF ETHICS• Golden Mean

• Aristotle, 4th Century BCE Greece

• A way of applying interpretations of the Golden Rule to multiple stakeholders

• An alternative to binary thinking

• A Third Way

• Neither socialism nor capitalism but…

• Risks?

• Another version of “socialism with a human face”

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WHAT’S YOUR STARTING POINT?• Five minutes thinking and writing:

• Which of the four theories – or another, if you choose – will be your starting point?

• Rule-based (Kant)

• Ends-based (Benthem, Mill)

• Golden Rule (Confucious, et. al.)

• Golden Mean (Aristotle)

• Five minutes conversation with a partner: Help each other sharpen your thinking

• Group discussion

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BACK TO THE QUIZ…• Foreman describes two main incentives for ethical

behavior:

• Moral

• Practical

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TWO MAIN FUNCTIONS OF NEWS ORGANIZATIONS

• To serve the public interest

• To make a profit

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ROSENSTIEL & KOVACH ON THE ESSENTIALS OF JOURNALISM:

• Journalism’s first obligation is to

• …the truth

• A journalist’s first loyalty is to

• …the audience

• The essence of journalism is to the discipline of

• …verification

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EXPECTATIONS FOR JOURNALISTS

• The Hutchins Commission was a report about what requested by whom in what year?

• The role of journalism in public life

• Henry Luce, the founder of TIME

• Commissioned in 1942, finally delivered in 1947

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HUTCHINS COMMISSION’S 5 RECOMMENDATIONS

• Accurate accounts of events with context that provide meaning

• A forum for exchange of comment & criticism

• Representative portrayals of various groups in society

• Discussion of society’s goals & values ?

• Full access to government proceedings

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SOME PERCEIVED PROS & CONS OF ETHICS CODES (CONS FIRST)

• Perceived Con: Bans or limitations on freebies

• Perceived Con: Potential for government control

• Perceived Con: Codes as tools for plaintiffs’ lawyers

• Perceived Pro: Codes as tools for journos’ lawyers

• Perceived Pro: Enhanced credibility

• Perceived Pro: A differentiator for professional journos

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OBSERVER VS. PARTICIPANT: ORPHANS OF ADDICTION (1997)

• Principles in tension:

• Truth (letting the story play out) vs. minimizing harm (protecting children from “imminent danger”)

• What alternatives might the L.A Times have considered?

• Fuller up-front discussion of possible ethical challenges

• Note to readers describing surveillance of pastor

• Lessons reflected in Nazario’s “Enrique’s Journey” (2002)

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SOURCES OF HOSTILITY TOWARD JOURNALISTS

• Too many mistakes (facts, grammar, spelling, punctuation)

• Bias

• Insensitivity

• Anonymity

• Sensationalism

• Influence of advertisers

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YOUR BLOG POSTS: KEY ETHICAL PRINCIPLES IN TENSION?

• Alex

• Audrey

• Brittany

• Cameron

• Emily

• Hongyi

• Jessica

• Kareya

• Matt

• Serefina

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UNDERCOVER REPORTING ABOUT NATIONAL EXAMS

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HOW MIGHT THE 4 THEORIES OF ETHICS APPLY TO THESE 2 CASES?• Rule-based

• Ends-Based

• Golden Rule

• Golden Mean

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10 MINUTE BREAK

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ETHICAL DECISION-MAKING PROCESS: POSSIBLE GUIDING PRINCIPLES

• Truth (SPJ & McBride/Rosenstiel)

• Independence (SPJ)

• Minimizing Harm SPJ)

• Accountability (SPJ)

• Transparency (McBride/Rosenstiel)

• Community (McBride/Rosenstiel)

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AN ETHICS PROCESS(REVISE AS YOU SEE FIT)

1. Agree on guiding principles2. Get clear on your journalistic purpose3. Get clear about identity of stakeholders4. Start with your gut but don’t stop there5. Next consider rules, laws, codes6. Then reflect on how your principles are in tension7. Invite disagreement and challenge8. Consider long-term as well as immediate consequences9. Come up with at least three alternatives10. Explain your selection of one alternative, in writing

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CASE STUDY• Bit.ly/nytpope

• Bit.ly/nytpope

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CASE STUDY• Bit.ly/BFeed1

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WORKING A CASE WITH THESE:1. Agree on guiding principles2. Get clear on your journalistic purpose3. Get clear about identity of stakeholders4. Start with your gut but don’t stop there5. Next consider rules, laws, codes6. Then reflect on how your principles are in tension7. Invite disagreement and challenge8. Consider long-term as well as immediate consequences9. Come up with at least three alternatives10. Explain your selection of one alternative, in writing

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GRADES• Participation: 0-5 points per class (25 total)

• Weekly posts, comments, presentations: 0-5 (25 total)

• Operation Correct That Error ( 5 total)

• Blog (10 total)

• Personal Ethics Guidelines (15 total)

• Final paper (20 total)

• Extra credit ( 8 total)

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ASSIGNMENT: WEEKLY POST• Weekly blog posts due Sundays at 7 a.m.

• Analyze ethical principles at stake in a case – link to the story and specify the principles in tension!

• Explore various alternatives

• Might (or not) include links to existing media criticism

• Might (or not) include conversation or email w/ a stakeholder, e.g. reporter, subject of coverage, etc.

• Prep to present your case orally (I’ll pick 2 each week)

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ASSIGNMENT: WEEKLY COMMENT

• Comment on at least one of your classmate’s posts

• Due by 3 p.m. Mondays

• See if you can add to the conversation about the issue

• Less important whether you agree or disagree

• More important that you suggest a fresh look

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ASSIGNMENT: CORRECTION• Operation Correct That Error, first steps by 7 a.m. July 17

• Find an error, alert the publisher, get it fixed

• Describe your process with a blog post

• Particulars of what you did

• Lessons learned about accuracy & the phenomenon of corrections in the digital era

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ASSIGNMENT: PERSONAL ETHICS GUIDELINES• Personal ethics guidelines, first draft due 7 a.m. July 24

• Should include:

• Principles you’ll uphold

• Discussion of philosophical/historical roots of your guidelines

• Process you’ll follow in ethical-decision making

• Evidence of research you’ve done on others’ guidelines in the course of developing your own

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ASSIGNMENT: FINAL PAPER• Make journalism better! (snapshot due 7 a.m., July 31)

• Propose a reform (or even just renewed emphasis) in an area of media ethics you believe needs it

• Might involve anonymous sources, plagiarism, fabrication, conflict of interest, etc. – or something much less visible

• Document your argument with examples and include at least a couple of interviews

• Make specific recommendations

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YOUR BLOG• In addition to your weekly posts, consider:

• A blog roll

• A Twitter list

• Other tools to make your blog a useful center of conversation about journalism ethics

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UPCOMING ASSIGNMENTS• 7 a.m. Friday July 17: First steps on Operation Correct

That Error

• 7 a.m. Sunday July 19: Weekly post published on your blog

• 3 p.m. Monday July 20: Comment posted to a classmate’s blog

• 5:30 p.m. Monday July 20: Read Chapters 7, 8, 12 in The Ethical Journalist

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ETHICS IN THE NEWS…• The media as Bill Cosby’s accomplice

• Meaningless numbers presented as real news

• Google’s alternative revenue stream: Contributor