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The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy and Media Ethics is an outstanding survey and assessment of this vitally important field. Essential reading for students and researchers in philosophy, media and communication studies, politics and law, as well as practicing media professionals and journalists.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction
Carl Fox and Joe Saunders Part 1: Freedom of Speech, Privacy, and Censorship 1. Hate Speech and the Limits of Free Speech
Gerald Lang 2. Privacy and the Media
Kevin Macnish and Haleh Asgarinia 3. The Ethics and Politics of Self-Censorship
Matthew Festenstein 4. Academic Freedom and the Duty of Care: Reframing Media Coverage of Campus Controversies
Shannon Dea 5. Should we Unbundle Free Speech and Press Freedom?
Robert Mark Simpson and Damien Storey Part 2: The News Media 6. Political Legitimacy and the News Media: Four Normative Models of the Political Role of the News Media
Jonathan Heawood and Fabienne Peter 7. In the Business of Revealing State Secrets
Dorota Mokrosinska 8. The Death Knock: A Legitimate Journalistic Practice?
Steven Knowlton and Carl Fox 9. How Just War Theory Can Help Media's War Coverage
Jovana Davidovic 10. Ethical Issues in Science Journalism: The Benefits of Reporting about Value-Laden Judgments
Kevin C. Elliott 11. The Ethics of Media Interviewing: Asking Good Questions and Listening to the Answers
Susan Notess and Lani Watson 12. What is the Public Interest in Crime News? The Expressive Function of Newsworthiness
Christopher Bennett Part 3: Broadening the Scope: Giving Other Aspects of the Media their Due 13. Complicity and Sports Journalism
Tom Bradshaw 14. Satire and Stability
Carl Fox 15. The Art of Immoral Artists
Shen-yi Liao 16. Ethics of Advertising
Jamie Dow 17. "Conspiracy Theories", the Deep State, and the Media
David Coady Part 4: Justice, Power, and Representation 18. Race and the Media: Beyond Defensiveness
Carl Fox 19. Tragedy and Inspiration: The Epistemic Injustice of Stereotypical Media Representations of Disability
Jessica Begon 20. Women's Subordination, Objectification and Silencing: The Role of Pornography
Lina Papadaki 21. Sport and Re-creation in the Media
Stephen Mumford and Sheree Bekker 22. Class, Inequality, and the Media
Faik Kurtulmus and Jan Kandiyali 23. Break the Long Lens of the Law! From Police Propaganda to Movement Media
Koshka Duff Part 5: Vice and Virtue Online 24. The Ethics of Social Media: Being Better Online
Joe Saunders 25. Online Shaming's Invisible Harms
Karen Adkins 26. The Only Reason to Do Anything: Online Trolling as the Deceptive Disruption of Joint Action
Étienne Brown 27. The Ethics and Epistemology of Deepfakes
Taylor Matthews and Ian James Kidd 28. Scrolling Towards Bethlehem: Conforming to Authoritarian Social Media Laws
Yvonne Chiu 29. Keep Quiet Inside the Echo Chamber: The Ethics of Posting on Social Media
Yuval Avnur 30. New Media and Manipulation
Samantha Bradshaw and Massimo Renzo. Index
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Carl Fox is a lecturer in the Inter-Disciplinary Ethics Applied (IDEA) Centre at the University of Leeds, UK. He works on a range of topics in political philosophy, with a special focus on the ethics of the public sphere. Along with Joe Saunders, he co-edited
Media Ethics, Free Speech, and the Requirements of Democracy (2019).
Joe Saunders is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Durham University, UK. He works on ethics and agency in Kant and the post-Kantian tradition, as well as media ethics and the philosophy of love. With Carl Fox he previously edited the 2019 Routledge collection,
Media Ethics, Free Speech, and the Requirements of Democracy.