<p>This volume provides a comprehensive discussion of enduring and emerging challenges to ethical journalism worldwide.</p><p>The collection highlights journalism practice that makes a positive contribution to people’s lives, investigates the link between institutional power and ethical practices in journalism, and explores the relationship between ethical standards and journalistic practice. Chapters in the volume represent three key commitments: (1) ensuring practice informed by theory, (2) providing professional guidance to journalists, and (3) offering an expanded worldview that examines journalism ethics beyond traditional boundaries and borders. With input from over 60 expert contributors, it offers a global perspective on journalism ethics and embraces ideas from well-known and emerging journalism scholars and practitioners from around the world.</p><p>The Routledge Companion to Journalism Ethics serves as a one-stop shop for journalism ethics scholars and students as well as industry practitioners and experts.</p><p>Chapter 45 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.</p> <p>List of contributors </p><p>Introduction </p><p>Lada Trifonova Price, Karen Sanders, and Wendy N. Wyatt</p><p>SECTION 1</p><p>The development of journalism ethics and perspectives from</p><p>around the world </p><p>1 Why ethics still matters </p><p>Karen Sanders</p><p>2 From parochial to global: the turbulent history of journalism ethics </p><p>Stephen J. A. Ward</p><p>3 From journalism ethics to communication ethics </p><p>Pieter J. Fourie</p><p>4 Becoming <i>Junzi</i>: a Confucian approach to journalism ethics </p><p>Yayu Feng</p><p>5 Journalism culture and ethical ideology </p><p>Thomas Hanitzsch</p><p>6 Revisiting the requirements of Hutchins: context and coverage in</p><p>the post-George Floyd world </p><p>Scott Libin</p><p>7 Treating "local" journalists ethically: international news</p><p>organizations and global media ethics </p><p>Lindsay Palmer</p><p>8 The case for global media ethics </p><p>Herman Wasserman</p><p>9 Slow journalism as ethical journalism? </p><p>Tony Harcup</p><p>10 An Islamic perspective on media ethics: revisiting Western</p><p>journalism ethics </p><p>Saadia Izzeldin Malik</p><p>11 I am because we are: a relational approach to journalism </p><p>Leyla Tavernaro-Haidarian</p><p>12 Journalism ethics and practice in enclave societies </p><p>Nakhi Mishol-Shauli and Oren Golan</p><p>13 "Tell China’s story well": ethical orientations of Chinese journalists</p><p>in international reporting </p><p>Tianbo Xu and Minyao Tang</p><p>14 Formal freedom but tacit control: journalism in Japan </p><p>Shinji Oi, Shinsuke Sako, and Masaki Naka</p><p>15 Ethical choices in Brazilian journalism: corruption, investigation,</p><p>and community media </p><p>Raquel Paiva and Alexandre Enrique Leitão</p><p>16 Visual ethics: a matter of survival </p><p>Julianne H. Newton</p><p>SECTION 2</p><p>Enduring issues in journalism ethics </p><p>PART I</p><p>Broad issues </p><p>17 The ethics of privacy and the public interest: from principle to application </p><p>Franz Krüger</p><p>18 Exploring key principles: neutrality, balance, objectivity, and truth </p><p>Richard Thomas</p><p>19 Professional autonomy in an age of corporate interests </p><p>Angela Phillips</p><p>20 The ethics of transparency </p><p>Stephanie Craft and Tim P. Vos</p><p>21 Journalism ethics and political satire </p><p>Chad Painter</p><p>22 "Ventriloquists’ dummies" or truth bringers? The journalist’s role in</p><p>giving whistle-blowers a voice </p><p>Paul Lashmar</p><p>23 Ethical approaches to reporting death and trauma affecting</p><p>ordinary people </p><p>Jackie Newton and Sallyanne Duncan</p><p>24 Islam in the news: a model for transformation </p><p>Jacqui Ewart and Kate O’Donnell</p><p>25 Ethics and reporting on religion: from public interest</p><p>to public good </p><p>Verica Rupar</p><p>26 Representing women: challenges for the UK media and beyond</p><p>Suzanne Franks and Katie Toms</p><p>PART II</p><p>Case studies on day-to-day practices </p><p>27 The ethics of reporting rape in India: a case study </p><p>Somava Pande</p><p>28 Suicide news items and the pornographization of death: a Turkish</p><p>case study </p><p>Elif Korap Özel and Şadiye Deniz</p><p>29 Journalism ethics and the political economy of <i>zakazukha </i>and</p><p>kompromat in Russia </p><p>Anna Klyueva</p><p>30 Echo chamber journalism: migration reporting in Hungary </p><p>Péter Bajomi-Lázár</p><p>31 Beyond the ethics of objectivity: covering the refugee crisis in Slovenia </p><p>Dejan Jontes</p><p>32 Media capture in Central and Eastern Europe: the corrosive impact</p><p>on democracy and desecration of journalistic ethics</p><p>William Horsley</p><p>33 Mapping ethical dilemmas for sports journalism: an overview of the</p><p>Spanish landscape </p><p>José Luis Rojas-Torrijos and Xavier Ramon-Vegas</p><p>SECTION 3</p><p>Emerging issues in journalism ethics </p><p>34 Ethical issues in data journalism </p><p>Bastiaan Vanacker</p><p>35 Ethical issues in large-scale journalistic investigations </p><p>Gillian Phillips</p><p>36 Journalists’ use of UGC and automated content: ethical issues </p><p>Ramón Salaverría</p><p>37 Algorithmic news: ethical implications of bias in artificial</p><p>intelligence in journalism </p><p>Kathleen Bartzen Culver and Xerxes Minocher</p><p>38 The moral mandate of virtual reality journalism </p><p>John V. Pavlik</p><p>39 Clickbait and banal news </p><p>David Harte</p><p>40 "BREAKING NEWS": sourcing, online newsgathering,</p><p>and verification </p><p>David A. Craig</p><p>41 The case for using informed consent in journalism </p><p>Bruce Gillespie</p><p>42 Ethical implications of the right to be forgotten </p><p>Ana Azurmendi</p><p>43 The influence of fake news: rebuilding public trust in journalism </p><p>Kati Tusinski Berg</p><p>44 Native advertising and the negotiation of autonomy, transparency,</p><p>and deception </p><p>Raul Ferrer-Conill, Michael Karlsson, and Elizabeth Van Couvering</p><p>45 Journalism ethics and its participatory turn </p><p>Tobias Eberwein</p><p>46 Facebook and the boundaries of professional journalism </p><p>Brett G. Johnson and Kimberly Kelling</p><p>SECTION 4</p><p>Standard setting </p><p>47 Press self-regulation in an international context </p><p>Susanne Fengler</p><p>48 Journalism codes of conduct and ethics as a form of media governance </p><p>Katharine Sarikakis and Lisa Winter</p><p>49 Responsible freedom: the democratic challenge of regulating</p><p>online media </p><p>Jessica Heesen</p><p>50 Setting limits and controlling the media for ethical journalism </p><p>Chris Frost</p><p>51 Organizational ethics: theories and evidence of the influence of</p><p>organizations on news content and the ethics of individual journalists </p><p>Renita Coleman and Hussain Alkhafaji</p><p>52 Where accountability is insufficient, bad journalism thrives: the case</p><p>of the United Kingdom press </p><p>Brian Cathcart</p><p>53 Media accountability and complaint handling in Spain </p><p>Dolors Palau-Sampio</p><p>54 Reminders of responsibility: journalism ethics codes in Western Europe</p><p>Epp Lauk</p><p>55 Masters in their own house: media self-regulation as a safeguard for</p><p>press freedom</p><p>Svein Brurås</p><p>56 Ethics codes in post-communist countries: the case of Bulgaria and</p><p>Romania </p><p>Lada Trifonova Price</p><p>57 The humble yet lofty goals of a journalism ethics course</p><p>Wendy N. Wyatt</p><p>Index</p>