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Köp båda 2 för 2169 krOne of the many strengths of this book is its completeness and its authors capacity to summarise the majority of relevant aspects on journalism ethics [...] I would like to hear more about the Experience abroad chapter, as I think that a transcontinental comparison is essential...to understand other contexts quite distant from the glamorous representations of Journalism in UK, US and Europe [...] I believe this is the most complete text in journalism ethics to date. Dr Eddy Borges-Rey, University of Stirling, UK Admirably comprehensive [...] There are, of course, other books on media ethics, but these are either global in scope or concentrate on the US. Julian Petley, Brunel University, UK The new additions, particularly in terms of case studies are completely apt this is going to be a real challenge with things unpacking as the updates are done but I suspect if anyone can do this well and with clarity it is this author [...] Some more examples from newspapers/magazines etc I appreciate it would make the book a lot bigger but it is a practical journalism book so seeing things in the flesh as it were would be very helpful. Paula Hearsum, Senior Lecturer, University of Brighton, UK Breakout case studies or more examples of good and bad practice from various media platforms where ethical theories and concepts are applied to given situations would assist students in understanding of key issues, especially the more theoretical aspects. Dr Sallyanne Duncan, University of Strathclyde, UK
Chris Frost is Professor of Journalism at Liverpool John Moores University. He is the author of Designing for Newspapers and Magazines (second edition, 2011) and Reporting for Journalists (second edition, 2010). Before moving into teaching, he worked in newspapers for more than twenty years as a journalist and editor. He is a former president of the National Union of Journalists, and chairs the NUJ's Ethics Council. He is also Chair of the Association for Journalism Education and a National Executive Council member of the NUJ.
1. What are ethics? 2. News: towards a definition 3. Morality of reporting 4. The good journalist 5. Truth, accuracy, objectivity and trust 6. Privacy and intrusion 7. Reputation 8. Gathering the new 9. Reporting the vulnerable 10. Deciding what to publish 11. Harm and offence 12. Professional practice 13. Regulation 14. History of print regulation in the 20th Century 15. History of Print Regulation in the 21st Century 16. History of broadcast regulation 17. Codes of conduct as a regulatory system 18. Press regulation systems in the UK and Ireland 19. Broadcast regulation systems in the UK and Ireland 20. The Internet and journalism ethics 21. The Experience Abroad Appendix 1: IPSO Editors Code of Practice Appendix 2: NUJ Code of Conduct Appendix 3: Code of Practice for Press Council of Ireland Appendix 4: BBC Code of Ethics Appendix 5: Ofcom Broadcasting Code Appendix 6: Broadcast Authority of Ireland code Appendix 7: International Federation of Journalists Appendix 8: SPJ Code of Ethics Appendix 9: Addresses for regulatory bodies Appendix 10: Alliance of Independent Press Councils of Europe