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Jacquette, Dale. Journalistic Ethics: Moral
Responsibility in the Media (Basic Ethics in Action
Series).(Book review)

Communication Research Trends

September 1, 2010 | ​Way, Maria

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Jacquette,​ Dale. ​Journalistic​ ​Ethics:​ ​Moral​ ​Responsibility​ ​in​ the ​Media​ (Basic

Ethics ​in​ Action Series). ​Upper​ ​Saddle​ River, NJ: ​Pearson​/Prentice Hall, 2007. ISBN

0-13-182539-9 (pb.) $39.20 / 23.99 [pounds sterling].

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Jacquette sets out to offer a critical exploration of key concepts and the ​moral​ decision

making involved ​in​ ​journalistic​ ethics. ​In​ Britain, polls have consistently shown that

journalists are not trusted by the general public and this, together with the problems and

challenges that are presented by an ever more competitive industry, mean that

journalistic​ ethics are being questioned, possibly more than they have ever previously

been questioned before.

The book’s chapters begin with an introduction called “What Journalists Do?” and the

author sums up ​journalistic​ ethics ​in​ an injunction that journalists provide “maximally

relevant truth telling ​in​ the public interest” (p. 1), noting that this “seemingly innocent

sounding description” raises philosophical issues directly relevant to professional

journalism and that if we want to hold journalists to be morally responsible for the truthful

content of their product, then we must not ask them to do something that they are incapable

of doing–for instance, while a reporter may report on an earthquake, he/she cannot be

expected to stop that earthquake. Jacquette draws on Kant ​in​ saying that “ought” implies

“can,” but the two may be incompatible with actuality. To tell the truth is a noble idea (ibid.)

but can conflict with real-life pressures, some of which relate to the fact that publishing and

broadcasting are generally businesses, and general business ethics are not always

compatible with journalism. Journalists have special ​moral​rights and responsibilities–as

do their consumers. It is for this reason that Jacquette (p. 3) writes that the ​journalistic

rights and responsibilities, ​moral​ rights and principles discussed ​in​ this book, are derived

from one single statement of the journalist’s professional calling: The ​moral​ imperative of

professional journalism, its purpose, and what it requires of its practitioners, is to provide

relevant truth telling ​in​ the public interest. Codes of ethics, the author says, give us valuable

insight into journalists’ perception of the limits within which they believe they must work ​in

order to gather, edit, and report news. (A variety of codes of practice are printed at the end

of the book, pp. 282-291.)

Jacquette notes (p. 4) that ​moral​ instruction, ​in​ the form of a professional 10

commandments, even though valuable, does not explain or justify the reasons that sets of

rules are appropriate. It is for this reason that Jacquette attempts to clarify journalism’s

aims and purposes and to reveal the philosophical basis of ​journalistic​ ​moral​ rights and

responsibilities. ​Journalistic​ ethics are, Jacquette says, a special topic area ​in​ applied

professional ethics (p. 11), and he adds that news has now become a form of entertainment.

In​ Britain, I once heard this summarized as “There is death, plague, war, and destruction ​in

various parts of the world, but, on the bright side, there is a poodle ​in​ Croydon which can

dance.” This infotainment, he notes, brings its own ​moral​ issues, but he adds that

entertainment pieces can assist ​in​ the knitting together of a community; assist ​in​ allowing

us to understand current events differently, sometimes through their comic values; and can

provide perspectives on popular culture. This can often be justified as being ​in​ the public

interest. I found the most worrying part of this chapter the initial quotation from Geoffrey C.

Ward: “Journalism is merely history’s first draft” (p. xiii). While I have myself studied old

newspapers during research projects, one can often see bias coming through. How do we

draw history from such broadcasting and press? Will Internet journalism (often freer) be

archived and accessible ​in​ the future? More immediately, how do consumers draw truthful

information from ​media​?

Truth telling is the topic of Chapter 1. Jacquette uses three case studies, two of which are

cases that are perhaps more familiar to the American constituency, while the “Newsweek

and the Holy Koran at Guantanamo Bay” example will be more familiar elsewhere. The

author points to the problems associated with a variety of stories, noting that journalists

would be wrong to try to satisfy what they themselves consider morally objectionable

interests–through giving confidential medical information about people, for instance. The

chapter, like all the others, ends with a summary of its content.

Chapter 2 considers ​journalistic​ rights and responsibilities and journalists’ legal and

moral​rights, again with three case studies. Chapter 3, “​Moral​ Ideals and Workaday

Journalistic​Realities” deals with ​moral​ ideals and possible conflicts between these ideals

and the market reality. ​In​ this chapter, Jacquette considers four case studies and the pros

and cons of the mass ​media​ age. He suggests that while television is a good way to spread

news, it can also be a highly profitable business and there may here be a clash between

responsibility​ and the need to contribute to a profitable business, which brings its own

problematics. He also looks at problems raised by possible conflicts between the need to

keep advertising sponsorship and income-drawing benefactors, and the need to report

truthfully or, indeed, to report on a story at all. Journalists also face a conflict between the

need to keep a business profitable and their need to stand firm against financial

intimidation (pp. 80ff.).

Chapter 4 discusses press freedom. The free press, he writes, is an ideal ​moral​ abstraction

and so draws all the same ambiguities and qualifications as discussions on freedom ​in

general (p. 95). He states that notions of press freedom would not be expected to include

license to publish child pornography, sensitive military secrets, or instructions on how to

make pipe bombs. A society, he writes (p. 97), is particularly at risk of undermining press

freedom when its vital interests are threatened by the availability of certain types of

information. At this point, responsible leaders must take measures to help citizens to

become more secure by preventing potentially damaging facts from being too widely

disseminated, and he points to the qualification of the free exercise of the free press ​in​ a

worst case scenario (Trager & Dickerson, 1999). ​In​ the U.S., he says, there is constitutional

protection of ​journalistic​ freedoms and this, if on the right track, correctly formulates an

ethical ideal of press freedom (p. 99). While he asks what the significance of appending a

Bill of Rights to the Constitution might be, he notes that there are no definitive answers to

his question, but suggests that this is a product of the Englightenment, itself almost an

exclusive product of European philosophy and science. While this had an effect, many ​in

early American society still equated morality and political authority with religious dogma

and this was problematic. The fathers of the American nation wished to limit the impact of

religious dogma on the social fabric. This fear or concern, together with religious wars,

Inquisitions, “holy” Crusades, and internecine conflict between different sects assisted ​in

the enforcement of legal separation between Church and state (p. 105). While nobody was

legally bound or forbidden from practicing a religion, and no religion was awarded privilege

under the U.S. Constitution, religion was not to be a actor ​in​ political decision-making. The

case study, printed from page 115 onwards, considers a 2003 report from Reporters Without

Borders noting that the united States and Italy have relatively low rankings ​in​ regard to

press freedom, further noting that wealth and press freedom are not always related.

Chapter 5, “Censorship and Witholding Information for the Greater Good,” begins by saying

that a free press (and we must extrapolate from this, free ​media​) is among the most

important ​moral​ rights of a free people and journalists must take advantage of this right,

from which every person ideally benefits (p. 126). Following the previous observation that

press freedom is neither an absolute nor an unconditional freedom, journalism must be

exercised within limits established on a society’s legitimate interests, particularly where

security and individual societal members’ protection are concerned. He notes that there are

real-life situations where fundamental ​journalistic​ ethics to maximize relevant truth

telling must be qualified by the public interest. ​In​ such cases, there must be a sufficiently

good reason for censorship, or the voluntary withholding of information, for the greater

good, and there must always be explicit provision for the restoration of full ​journalistic

freedom as soon as possible. Following an exploration of the philosophical and historical

background to censorship, Jacquette writes that an exact explanation and philosophical

justification of censorship, as well as a proper theory of censorship, is important ​in​ deciding

whether censorship is justified. This prevents censorship abuse and can prevent censors

from “taking society down a slippery slope leading to more and more censorship, less and

less freedom of the press, and finally to the subversion and co-option of a free press for

purposes of political, religious, or big business propaganda” (p. 129). He suggests that there

are three principles for the control of censorship: the Interdependence of a Free Society and

a Free Press; the obligation to Maximize Relevant Truth, and the Distinguishing of Morally

Justified Censorship. To test these principles, he looks at a number of so-called “hard

cases.”

Chapter 6 considers the protection of confidential sources and problems caused by the use

of such sources to application of the fundamental ​moral​ principles of ​journalistic​ ethics.

Journalists must provide relevant truth telling ​in​ the public interest, but problems attached

to the use of confidential sources are particularly interesting here. The chapter explores

ethics relating to the use and protection of anonymous news sources and notes that these

issues are more complex than may at first be thought, but the chapter concludes that

journalists have a ​moral​ right and ​responsibility​ for the use and protection of these

confidential sources. ​In​Chapter 7, questions are raised about privacy and about the

breaking of contracts, such as the publication of photographs of celebrity weddings granted

to one magazine when another publishes “spoiler” pictures. When is it right to publish

photographs or stories about “celebrities” when they may want privacy? Does their

“celebrityhood” abnegate normal privacy needs and normal common decency? Is it right, I

would ask, to broadcast or print pictures of bereaved people going to see the body of their

lost loved one or to film family members at a funeral? ​In​ Italy, there often cases where

reporters thrust microphones almost up the nose of bereaved parents when a child has been

lost, either ​in​ a natural disaster or through murder. How can this be justified? How are

parents supposed to feel ​in​ such a case, and why should they be asked? He also writes here

about the reporting of suicides and, once again, uses the example of the paparazzi involved

in​ the “Princess Diana and Dodi Al Fayed” tragedy. Will they never be allowed to rest ​in

peace?

Chapter 8 studies objectivity, perspective, and bias. What exactly is objectivity? Without

high standards of objectivity, Jacquette says (p. 209), journalists cannot be expected to

deliver the quality of news-reporting that informed decision-making may require. To

continue, he looks at the notion that journalists may be ​in​ breach of ​journalistic​ ethics

when they “become part of the story.” As he says, there is not a cut-and-dried response to

this question. Here, he notes that technology may mean that there is “an almost irresistible

incentive for journalists to place themselves on the ground of news occurrences ​in​ order to

send back immediate photostreams and commentary” (p. 210). ​In​ an era of 24 hour news

broadcasts, the channels have a gaping maw that must be fed and, ​in​ my opinion, this has

dangers. The need to get the story first, the scoop, has resulted ​in​ the need to be even

speedier than before. This means that stories are often broadcast or published with little

elaboration. As Jacquette notes, persons under observation often behave differently than

they otherwise would, and while journalists are emphatically not supposed to create news ​in

order to have something on which to report (ibid.), there are ways ​in​ which journalists can

have a part ​in​ the events on which they are supposed to report that is both less obvious and

less morally objectionable. Journalists are supposed to observe and report, but ​in​ a war

zone it would be difficult for them not to become involved ​in​the events which they must

observe and report. Sometimes, the events ​in​ which they are involved result ​in​ the

journalist becoming so repulsed that he/she becomes morally and intellectually incapable of

remaining objective (p. 214). Examples given here are of Bosnia and Rwanda. While

objectivity is to be lauded, I cannot but think that it would be a poor journalist who did not

become morally, intellectually, and emotionally involved ​in​ reporting on, say, a genocide.

Even that luminary of British broadcasting, Richard Dimbleby, could not entirely disguise

his emotions on entering a concentration camp at the end of World War II. on page 232,

Jacquette writes that there are strains of contemporary philosophy that argue that all efforts

to discover and share truths are doomed to failure due to the layering of interpretations

between perception and judgement. Such scepticism has now gone beyond the philosophers

and has gained credence with many others. This poses particular challenges to ​journalistic

truth telling. From this viewpoint, there are no facts but only interpretations, so interpreters

will gravitate towards one way of considering something rather that to another. This

intellectual culture has spread to journalists, he suggests. other problems that arise ​in

regard to bias, objectivity, and perspective are the use of conjecture and speculation ​in​ the

news as well as use of unsubstantiated polls and opinion. Where one stops people to poll

them, who those people are, and how questions are asked, will affect the results obtained

and when, as Jacquette suggests ​in​ relation to the 2000 American Presidential election,

such unfounded results are given as concrete evidence, they may affect the eventual results.

Yet, one must remember, as he says, they have no more background truth than does

consulting Tarot cards or the Ouija board (p. 239).

Chapter 9 pursues the topic of ​journalistic​ perspective through consideration of the ethics

of editorial license. Jacquette notes that opinion columns ​in​ newspapers, or comment

pieces ​in​broadcasting, mean that opinions rather than facts are put into the public domain.

While there is, as the author agrees, a place for such opinion pieces, they must be

acknowledged as such and be differentiated from articles that report fact. Here, he

compares the rights and responsibilities of the editorial staff with those of the journalist.

The fact-value gap is studied philosophically and there is a short discussion on “spin.” It is

evident that, as Jacquette says (p. 260), the ​moral​ choices of those involved ​in​ editing and

writing editorials must be questioned and answered just as much as the choices made by

those reporting stories must. As part of this chapter, the author suggests professional

editorial guidelines for editorial writers and ways to promote editorial pluralism. To my

mind, the way to do this is by having a ​media​ industry that has the possibility to broadcast

or publish a variety of opinions. Just because one does not agree with the editorial of a

particular newspaper or broadcaster, it does not mean that that person or company should

not be free to express it. It is on this that freedom of speech should be based–and here I am

not suggesting that we accept hate speech. However, as recent elections have shown ​in

Europe, there is a fairly large group of people who have certain unpopular and even

distressing viewpoints–freedom of speech should mean that we can argue with them loudly

and vocally, while respecting that they are free to believe certain things.

The final chapter is about journalism as a force for social good, using both historical and

more contemporary examples (Twain’s Congo pamphlet, the London 7/7 bombings, and

Hurricane Katrina). Jacquette repeats Stobel’s theory that a

free press will enable a free people to reach the

right decisions about what its government is

doing both domestically and ​in​ its foreign policy.

Journalism makes the facts available ​in​ such

a compelling fashion that no government ​in​ a

free pluralistic society can ​in​ the long run sustain

a morally objectionable decision. (p. 278)

He notes that, once again, new technologies may have some bearing on truthful

reporting–the possibilities presented by digital photography, for instance. Technology,

following Postman, “encourages if not necessitates the transformation of informative

journalistic​ reporting and analysis, with its almost exclusive lock on viewing time and the

public’s information, into a dangerous form of entertainment” (p. 279). Technology,

Postman avers, is not innocent, and Jacquette suggests that the ideal would be for

governments, regardless of technology, to be prevented from bending “a free and

independent press … to the government’s purpose” (p. 250), and that the free press helps a

nation to properly guide itself.

The book has an extensive bibliography and is well-referenced. Given its summaries and the

questions it asks ​in​ each of its chapters, together with the case studies that it employs, this

book would be particularly useful for ​media​ and journalism students and their teachers,

but also for those studying history, politics, and philosophy. ​In​ addition, anyone interested

in​ the news or who works as a journalist would find it useful and interesting. It is both

informative an thought-provoking.

–Maria Way

Journalism & Mass Communication

university of Westminster

Reference

Trager, R. & Dickerson, ​D.​ L. (1999). Freedom of expression ​in​ the 21st century. Thousand

Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press.

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