![]() ![]() Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge 29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001 Selection and editorial matter © 1998 Matthew Kieran Individual chapters © 1998 the contributors All rights reserved. ![]() He has published articles in media ethics, aesthetics, ethics and social philosophy.įirst published 1998 by Routledge 11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2002. He is the author of Media Ethics: A Philosophical Approach and co-author of Regulating for Changing Values, a report for the Broadcasting Standards Commission. Editor: Matthew Kieran is Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Leeds. Contributors: David Archard, Martin Bell, Andrew Belsey, Noël Carroll, Ian Cram, Anthony Ellis, Gordon Graham, Bob Franklin, Richard Keeble, Matthew Kieran, Brian McNair, Mary Midgley, Rod Pilling, Nigel Warburton. Media Ethics includes a chapter by Martin Bell on responsible journalism and war reporting in Bosnia. They discuss the relationship between journalism and public relations, war reporting and military propaganda in the Gulf War, media portrayals of sex and violence, photojournalism and the tabloid press. The contributors explore issues of impartiality and objectivity, the ethics of political journalism, the regulation of privacy and media intrusion, and the justification of censorship. Media Ethics brings together philosophers, academics and media professionals to discuss the pressing ethical and moral questions faced by journalists and the media and to examine the basic notions such as truth, virtue, privacy, rights, offence, harm and freedom, underlying them. Should journalists be impartial and objective? How should the public’s right to know be balanced against an individual’s right to privacy? How should the media be regulated? Is there a justification for spin-doctors and chequebook journalism? The role and responsibilities of the media are constant subjects of public debate.
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