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Ethical Concerns

Ethical Concerns. How to Make Good Decisions. Why Ethics Matter. Truth Strings that come with obtaining the truth Bottom line: Hard work!. Recent Case No. 1. Recent Case No. 2. Recent Case No. 3. One Way to Help. The seven principles of the NSPA Code of Ethics are:

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Ethical Concerns

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  1. Ethical Concerns How to Make Good Decisions

  2. Why Ethics Matter • Truth • Strings that come with obtaining the truth • Bottom line: Hard work!

  3. Recent Case No. 1

  4. Recent Case No. 2

  5. Recent Case No. 3

  6. One Way to Help The seven principles of the NSPA Code of Ethics are: Be Responsible. Be Fair. Be Honest. Be Accurate. Be Independent. Minimize Harm. Be Accountable.

  7. There’s Also Preventive Analysis • Who can get hurt and how? • What actions can cause harm? Which are yours? • What about those actions make you blameworthy? • Are you willing to accept the consequences of those actions?

  8. Regardless, beware 5-headed monster

  9. Concern 1: Deception • Lying or misrepresenting yourself to obtain information • Should you pose as a young boy online and invite potential pedophiles to meet you at a local bar (and then videotape the meeting)? • Do you take someone else’s quotes (from a magazine) and include them without attribution?

  10. Concern 2: Conflict of Interest • Accepting gifts or favors from sources or promoting pet social and political causes • Do you let a source buy you lunch? • Do you take free hot dogs at the press table? • Do you accept free CDs from record labels? • Do you interview your friends or relatives?

  11. Concern 3: Endangering Life • Publishing information without regard to it hurting someone or their livelihood • Do you take that call from the gunman who’s holding hostages? • Do you expose that organization’s wrongdoings despite the likelihood that someone will lose his/her job?

  12. Concern 4: Sourcing • Publishing information that will burn sources • How well can you protect that source? • Which source is more believable? • When should sources be anonymous? • Which source hurts the public? • Are you more enamored with having an unnamed source than you are with the truth?

  13. Concern 5: Bias • Slanting a story by manipulating facts to sway opinions • How diverse are your sources? • What view dominates among your sources? • Do you use suggestive phrasing? • Does the story frame/theme/approach exclude other, pertinent views or ideas?

  14. Seeding Ethical Basics • Utilitarian • Veil of ignorance • Golden mean • Absolutist • Antinomian • Situational

  15. Samples of What You Can Do • Review case studies • Iraq • Seattle cops • Ask for views (e.g., ethics survey) • Role play (e.g., p. 9, Ethics in Action) • Policy discussions (e.g., pp. 14-27)

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