Journalism ethics and standards

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    Journalist A journalist is a person who collects, writes, or distributes news or other current information to the public. A journalist's work is called journalism. A journalist can work with general issues or specialize in certain issues. However, most journalists tend to specialize, and by cooperating with other journalists, produce journals that span many topics. For example, a sports journalist covers news within the world of sports, but this journalist may be a part of a newspaper

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    Joan Didion is an author who was part of the New Journalism movement during the 1960s and ’70s which was quite a change from the traditional styles. New Journalism utilized research and fiction-like writing methods to explore topics on events that occurred in the sixties and seventies. Joan used New Journalism techniques in her writing by using imagery to make a connection with the reader and convey morality. She first presents examples then builds up her essay to define what being immoral is. She

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    I recently conducted an interview with a Social Worker by the name Kathryn Schley. She has her Masters of Social Work, she is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker and is currently the Homeless Services Program Manager. The company she works at is called Southlight, a private non-profit health care organization. SouthLight’s mission is to, “meet the holistic needs of individuals facing addiction, mental illness, and chronic health challenges, by delivering compassionate and coordinated behavioral healthcare

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    hidden cameras; any exceptions should first be discussed with the top newsroom manager and the legal department (New York Times, 2005). By hacking into voicemails and wiretapping individuals, News of the World employees were breaking ethical standards in journalism. The decisions made by a few individuals instilled a corporate culture that eventually ended up affecting an entire industry. Rupert Murdoch is said to believe that “in the newsroom, where you do whatever it takes to get the story, take no

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    The Leveson inquiry is a public judicial inquiry into the culture practice and ethics of the British press, chaired by Lord Justice Leveson. The inquiry was established by current Prime Minister David Cameron, in the wake of former tabloid News of the World’s phone-hacking scandal. A press release made public on the 14th September 2011 stated that the Leveson enquiry was to investigate the ethical practices of the press, including the working relationships that police and politicians had towards

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    Media Convergence

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    A significant number of theories have been suggested to clarify the concentration of media ownership and the effects it’s had on the government and democracy. Convergence is the process, which changes the relations between audiences, technologies, markets and industries. This process has transformed the traditional extents of newspapers and publishing: “which has now subordinated towards the needs of corporations.” (Jenkins 2004) (Buckley 2008) Whilst previous literature has covered an extensive

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    stagnant for decades. A quick glance on the editorial positions of media’s organizations reveals how women do not ascend the top positions comparing to journalism 's female students (Lipinski, 2014). On the background of the forgoing facts, the newsroom diversity endures being one of the most important topics amongst scholars and professionals in journalism. The importance of diversity in newsrooms stems from the need for divergent journalists who can cover the variety of community 's aspects, so the news

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    result of its misunderstanding of a message or messages had been deleted (Leveson, 2012). While we focus in the perspective of view from the press and the public, what the employee did is aberrations and do not reflect on the culture, practices or ethics of the press as a whole. It is reflecting the media did not do things ethically as they aim to reach more readers and boost their sales; therefore they make the news more sensational to the public. In this condition, I would like to conclude that

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    CONCEPT 2: ETHICS AND LAW This concept is taken from module 1 of block 6 entitled “Ethical Issues in Nursing Practice”. 2.1 Significance of the Concept Ethics is developing a way of determining what values ought to be-how we ought to act embraces characteristics of honesty, fairness, compassion and integrity. Law is rules created by the governing body of a society to maintain harmony, stability and justice in that society. Ethics and law are exactly same in that ethics is what one should or should

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    Investigative reporting has been a driving force in journalism for centuries. The reporting tradition of revealing misconduct was already well established much before the 20th Century. Its practise even predates the publication of the first successful colonial newspaper in 1704, demonstrating the press’ watchdog role has had deep historical roots in democracy much prior to the 1960s. Over the past three centuries, investigative reporters have tried to make a difference by raising public consciousness

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