Media accountability : who will watch the watchdog in the Twitter age /

Media accountability : who will watch the watchdog in the Twitter age / Who will watch the watchdog in the Twitter age? edited by William A. Babcock. - vii, 164 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm

Chapters 1-8 were originally published as two special issues of the Journal of mass media ethics.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Mocking the news : how The Daily Show with Jon Stewart holds traditional broadcast news accountable / Toward an open ethics : implications of new media platforms for global ethics discourse / Recommendations for hosting audience comments based on discourse ethics / Newsgathering and privacy : expanding ethics codes to reflect change in the digital media age / Social audits as media watchdogging / Ethical implications of anonymous comments posted to online news stories / The ethics examiner and media councils : improving ombudsmanship and news councils for true citizen journalism / "I am eating a sandwich now" : intent and foresight in the Twitter age / Ethics and eloquence in journalism : an approach to press accountability / Chad Painter and Louis Hodges -- Stephen J. A. Ward and Herman Wasserman -- Mark Cenite and Yu Zhang -- Ginny Whitehouse -- Walter B. Jaehnig and Uche Onyebadi -- Laura Hlavach and William H. Freivogel -- Rick Kenney and Kerem Ozkan -- Stacy Elizabeth Stevenson and Lee Anne Peck -- Theodore L. Glasser and James S. Ettema.

0415698391 9780415698399


Mass media--Moral and ethical aspects

P94 / .M3543 2012

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