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  1. Ethical journalism: a guide for students, practitioners, and consumers.Philip Meyer - 1987 - Lanham, Md.: University Press of America.
    Based on a survey of editors, publishers and staff members of 300 newspapers, this work documents the ethical confusion in the American press in the wake of the Watergate scandal and the Pentagon Papers controversy. It provides an analytical and historical framework to show how the press reached this point and argues for an ethical audit to give publications an independent check on their moral condition.
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  • Studies in the Language of Homer.George Melville Bolling & G. P. Shipp - 1954 - American Journal of Philology 75 (4):415.
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  • Rights, Wrongs, and Responsibilities: Law and Ethics in the Newsroom.Paul S. Voakes - 2000 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 15 (1):29-42.
    How do journalists sort out the tangle of legal rights and ethical responsibilities in their everyday news work? A survey of 1,037 journalists and in-depth interviews with 22 others, found substantial evidence for 3 models of the relation of law and ethics: a Separate Realms model, a Correspondence model, and a new "Responsibility Model" in which the law is considered in problematic situations but only as one of several considerations in what is essentially an ethical decision. The findings have implications (...)
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  • Instrumentalism and American Legal Theory.Robert S. Summers - 1982
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  • Media lawyers as factors in the ethical decisions of journalists.Sigman L. Splichal - 1997 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 12 (2):101 – 108.
    Me d i a lawyers were surveyed about their perceptions of journalism ethics, whether they discussed journalism ethics with their media clients, and whether they believed such nonlegal counseling were appropriate. The study found that most media lawyers do contribute to ethical decision making i n news organizations and believe the practice appropriate. It concludes that, as a result, indust y and academic proponents of journalistic ethics should target not only journalists but also media lawyers in their attempts to foster (...)
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  • The role of government in undermining journalistic ethics.Richard Kaplan & Patrick Maines - 1995 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 10 (4):236 – 247.
    Government has played a pervasive and largely overlooked role in journalists' ethical decision making. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) rules governing program content, and a libel law system run amok, are only two wats government influences journalists' behavior. This substitution of government ethics for private ethics creates minimum standards of conduct rather than challenging journalists to an ethical ideal. More subtly, government erects structural barriers to the development of the very technologies (like cable TV) that can offer journalists a more ethically (...)
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