Remove 2014 Remove Ethics Remove Journalism Remove Media
article thumbnail

Leveson Inquiry archive important contribution to debate and education on media ethics

Stephen Waddington

It provides access to a wealth of evidence from the landmark inquiry, which examined the central role of news and journalism in modern society. It heard evidence for more than eight months exploring the media's relationship with the public, politicians and the police. It's easy to forget how big the Leveson Inquiry was.

article thumbnail

“Trust is a forward-looking metric” — Five key takeaways for business leaders from our chat with Tonia Ries on the Edelman Trust Barometer

NewsWhip

Business is more trusted than government and media, but also under more scrutiny The above demand for leadership is likely at least in-part driven by business being trusted more than its counterparts in both government and the media. (Source: Edelman Trust Barometer, p.14 Source: Edelman Trust Barometer, p.7

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Survey: How Millennials View #PREthics

PRSay

This month, the PRSA Board of Ethics and Professional Standards, together with the Arthur W. Page Center , is sponsoring survey research with Millennials who are members of PRSA to better understand their readiness to respond to ethical issues presented in the workplace. Sources of ethics education, training, and information.

Survey 60
article thumbnail

Double-dipping exposes reputation risk in blurred boundaries of PR and journalism

PR Conversations

As media scandals go, it was a big one for Canada: The revelation that for the past two years one of the nation’s better-known TV news anchors was a part owner of a small public relations firm. For public relations practitioners committed to ethics and professionalism, the natural first instinct was self-righteous shock.

article thumbnail

Double-dipping exposes reputation risk in blurred boundaries of PR and journalism

PR Conversations

As media scandals go, it was a big one for Canada: The revelation that for the past two years one of the nation’s better-known TV news anchors was a part owner of a small public relations firm. For public relations practitioners committed to ethics and professionalism, the natural first instinct was self-righteous shock.

article thumbnail

An Interview with Richard Bistrong, CEO, Front-Line Anti-Bribery LLC

Critical Mention

From going to prison after being convicted for violating the FCPA (the US foreign anti-bribery law) to founding Front-Line Anti-Bribery LLC, and educating multinationals on current issues and challenges with respect to compliance, ethics and anti-bribery, Richard Bistrong has come a long way. Most of this happened in the U.S. If so, how?

article thumbnail

PR history – prospecting for archival gold

PR Conversations

As this was my first archival cataloguing task, I asked for advice from librarians on cataloguing procedures and protocols and also from media historian colleagues who have vast experience in digitizing sound and visual archives. The former Code of Ethics group chairman M. The minutes of meetings were recorded by year and venue (e.g.

Ethics 75