As immigration, technological change, and globalization reshape the world, journalism plays a central role in shaping how the public adjusts to moral and material upheaval. This, in turn, raises the ethical stakes for journalism. In short, reporters have a choice in the way they tell these stories: They can spread panic and discontent or encourage adaptation and reconciliation. In Murder in Our Midst, Romayne Smith Fullerton and Maggie Jones Patterson compare journalists' crime coverage decisions in North America and select Western European countries as a key to examine culturally constructed concepts like privacy, public, public right to know, and justice. Drawing from sample news coverage, national and international codes of ethics and style guides, and close to 200 personal interviews with news professionals and academics, they highlight differences in crime news reporting practices and emphasize how crime stories both reflect and shape each nation's attitudes in unique ways. Murder in Our Midst is both an empirical look at varying journalistic styles and an ethical evaluation of whether particular story-telling approaches do or do not serve the practice of democracy.
ISBN: | 9780190863531 |
Publication date: | 1st March 2021 |
Author: | Romayne Smith (Associate Professor, Faculty of Information and Media Studies, Associate Professor, Faculty of Inform Fullerton |
Publisher: | Oxford University Press Inc |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 320 pages |
Genres: |
Media, entertainment, information and communication industries News media and journalism Communication studies Crime and criminology Sociology Ethics and moral philosophy |