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  1. An Ethic of Advocacy: Metajournalistic Discourse on the Practice of Leaks and Whistleblowing from Valerie Plame to the Trump Administration.Brett G. Johnson, Liz Bent & Caroline Dade - 2020 - Journal of Media Ethics 35 (1):2-16.
    This study analyzes the metajournalistic discourse surrounding leaks and whistleblowing crafted by online journalism industry publications since 2004. The goal of the study is to understand how jou...
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  • Respecting privacy in an information society: A journalist's dilemma.L. Paul Husselbee - 1994 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 9 (3):145 – 156.
    Private information about individuals contained in computerized data bases is readily available to journalists, who have a moral obligation to inform the masses as a means of redistributing power in society. The journalist's duty to inform, however, conflicts with the duty to respect the privacy of individuals. Because legislation is largely ineffective in protecting individual privacy, the journalist's moral responsibility assumes additional weight. However, the journalist should not allow the claim of privacy to keep him or her from investigating matters (...)
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  • Public Opinion About News Coverage of Leaders' Private Lives.Daniel Riffe - 2003 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 18 (2):98-110.
    The need for those who govern to be accountable to the governed often conflicts with the right of an individual, albeit a public leader, to privacy. This survey found that most Ohio residents believe job performance can be affected by what goes on in private lives, but most don't believe scrutiny of private matters is a media responsibility and find such coverage excessive and unfair. Belief in importance of accountability was related to support for media's responsibility to provide scrutiny, but (...)
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  • Journalist reliance on teens and children.Jenn Burleson Mackay - 2008 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 23 (2):126 – 140.
    This study considers the ethical implications of quoting children with particular emphasis on privacy and accuracy. A content analysis is used to examine how newspaper reporters quote children and teenagers. The study found that youths most likely are named when they are quoted in the newspaper. Teens who are 17 are the most likely to be quoted. Youths most frequently appear in feature stories, and they most frequently are treated as experts who provide the reporter with factual information. The researcher (...)
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  • What Kind of Media, and When? Public Opinion about Press Coverage of Politicians' Private Lives.Bartosz W. Wojdynski & Daniel Riffe - 2011 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 26 (3):206 - 223.
    Respondents in a southern state telephone survey agreed that media coverage of public leaders' private lives is an important news media responsibility, with agreement greater for legacy media than for online media, and differing depending on hypothetical scenario. The data also suggest increasing tolerance for such coverage and growing belief in responsibility of media to report on private indiscretions relative to previous studies.
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  • The Public’s Right to Know in the Age of Social Media.Gretchen Dworznik - 2016 - Journal of Media Ethics 31 (2):134-136.
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