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El. knyga: Handbook of Global Communication and Media Ethics

Edited by (International Center for Media Studies (ICMS), USA), Edited by (Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA)

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This groundbreaking handbook provides a comprehensive picture of the ethical dimensions of communication in a global setting. Both theoretical and practical, this important volume will raise the ethical bar for both scholars and practitioners in the world of global communication and media.
  • Brings together leading international scholars to consider ethical issues raised by globalization, the practice of journalism, popular culture, and media activities

  • Examines important themes in communication ethics, including feminism, ideology, social responsibility, reporting, metanarratives, blasphemy, development, and “glocalism”, among many others

  • Contains case studies on reporting, censorship, responsibility, terrorism, disenfranchisement, and guilt throughout many countries and regions worldwide

  • Contributions by Islamic scholars discuss various facets of that religion's engagement with the public sphere, and others who deal with some of the religious and cultural factors that bedevil efforts to understand our world

Recenzijos

"The present volume is the most far-reaching to date. Summing Up: Essential. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals." (Choice, 1 November 2011)

Notes on Contributors ix
Preface xix
1 Primordial Issues in Communication Ethics
1(19)
Clifford G. Christians
2 Communication Ethics: The Wonder of Metanarratives in a Postmodern Age
20(21)
Ronald C. Arnett
3 Information, Communication, and Planetary Citizenship
41(13)
Luiz Martins da Silva
4 Global Communication and Cultural Particularisms: The Place of Values in the Simultaneity of Structural Globalization and Cultural Fragmentation - The Case of Islamic Civilization
54(25)
Bassam Tibi
5 The Ethics of Privacy in High versus Low Technology Societies
79(19)
Robert S. Fortner
6 Social Responsibility Theory and Media Monopolies
98(21)
P. Mark Fackler
7 Ethics and Ideology: Moving from Labels to Analysis
119(14)
Lee Wilkins
8 Fragments of Truth: The Right to Communication as a Universal Value
133(21)
Philip Lee
9 Glocal Media Ethics
154(17)
Shakuntala Rao
10 Feminist Ethics and Global Media
171(22)
Linda Steiner
11 Words as Weapons: A History of War Reporting - 1945 to the Present
193(22)
Richard Lance Keeble
12 Multidimensional Objectivity for Global Journalism
215(19)
Stephen J.A. Ward
13 New Media and an Old Problem: Promoting Democracy
234(13)
Deni Elliott
Amanda Decker
14 The Dilemma of Trust
247(16)
Ian Richards
15 The Ethical Case for a Blasphemy Law
263(35)
Neville Cox
16 The Medium is the Moral
298(19)
Michael Bugeja
17 Development Ethics: The Audacious Agenda
317(25)
Chloe Schwenke
18 Indigenous Media Values: Cultural and Ethical Implications
342(22)
Joe Grixti
19 Media Ethics as Panoptic Discourse: A Foucauldian View
364(12)
Ed McLuskie
20 Ethical Anxieties in the Global Public Sphere
376(17)
Robert S. Fortner
21 Universalism versus Communitarianism in Media Ethics
393(22)
Clifford G. Christians
22 Responsibility of Net Users
415(19)
Raphael Cohen-Almagor
23 Media Ethics and International Organizations
434(18)
Cees J. Hamelink
24 Making the Case for What Can and Should Be Published
452(9)
Bruce C. Swaffield
25 Ungrievable Lives: Global Terror and the Media
461(20)
Giovanna Borradori
26 Journalism Ethics in the Moral Infrastructure of a Global Civil Society
481(20)
Robert S. Fortner
27 Problems of Application
501(15)
P. Mark Fackler
28 Disenfranchised and Disempowered: How the Globalized Media Treat Their Audiences - A Case from India
516(18)
Anita Dighe
29 Questioning Journalism Ethics in the Global Age: How Japanese News Media Report and Support Immigrant Law Revision
534(20)
Kaori Hayashi
30 Ancient Roots and Contemporary Challenges: Asian Journalists Try to Find the Balance
554(23)
Jiafei Yin
31 Understanding Bollywood
577(25)
Vijay Mishra
32 Peace Communication in Sudan: Toward Infusing a New Islamic Perspective
602(24)
Haydar Badawi Sadig
Hala Asmina Guta
33 Media and Post-Election Violence in Kenya
626(29)
P. Mark Fackler
Levi Obonyo
Mitchell Terpstra
Emmanuel Okaalet
34 Ethics of Survival: Media, Palestinians, and Israelis in Conflict
655(22)
Oliver Witte
35 Voiceless Glasnost: Responding to Government Pressures and Lack of a Free Press Tradition in Russia
677(23)
Victor Akhterov
36 Media Use and Abuse in Ethiopia
700(35)
Zenebe Beyene
37 Collective Guilt as a Response to Evil: The Case of Arabs and Muslims in the Western Media
735(17)
Rasha A. Abdulla
Mervat Abou Oaf
38 Journalists as Witnesses to Violence and Suffering
752(22)
Amy Richards
Jolyon Mitchell
39 Reporting on Religious Authority Complicit with Atrocity
774(11)
Paul A. Soukup
40 The Ethics of Representation and the Internet
785(18)
Boniface Omachonu Omatta
41 Authors, Authority, Ownership, and Ethics in Digital Media and News
803(20)
Jarice Hanson
42 Ethical Implications of Blogging
823(22)
Bernhard Debatin
43 Journalism Ethics in a Digital Network
845(19)
Jane B. Singer
44 Now Look What You Made Me Do: Violence and Media Accountability
864(27)
Peter Hulm
45 Protecting Children from Harmful Influences of Media through Formal and Nonformal Media Education
891(21)
Asbjørn Simonnes
Gudmund Gjelsten
46 Ethics and International Propaganda
912(21)
Philip M. Taylor
47 Modernization and Its Discontents: Ethics, Development, and the Diffusion of Innovations
933(20)
Robert S. Fortner
48 Communication Technologies in the Arsenal of Al Qaeda and Taliban: Why the West Is Not Winning the War on Terror
953(20)
Haydar Badawi Sadig
Roshan Noorzai
Hala Asmina Guta
49 The Ethics of a Very Public Sphere: Differential Soundscapes and the Discourse of the Streets
973(19)
Robert S. Fortner
Index 992
Robert S. Fortner is Director of the Media Research Institute, a non-profit organization serving the church, NGO and international radio community with research to assist them in meeting their missions. He is also a Professor of Communication Arts and Sciences at Calvin College. He is the author of International Communication: History, Conflict and Control of the Global Metropolis (Wadsworth, 1993), Public Diplomacy and International Politics: The Symbolic Constructs of Summits and International Radio News (Praeger, 1994), Radio, Morality and Culture: Britain, Canada and the United States 1919-1945 (Southern Illinois University Press, 2006), and Communication, Media, and Identity: A Christian Theory of Communication (Rowman and Littlefield, 2007). Mark Fackler is Professor of Communication Arts and Sciences at Calvin College. He has taught at Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia, Daystar University, Kenya, and Uganda Christian University (Mukono). Fackler is co-author of Media Ethics: Cases and Moral Reasoning (Longman, 7th edition, 2005) and Good News: Social Ethics and the Press (Oxford University Press, 1993) and has contributed and edited other several books, chapters, and papers on media, ethics, and emerging democracies in East Africa.