Remove Blogging Remove Ethics Remove Interviews Remove Public Affairs
article thumbnail

6 Ways to Improve Your Business Expertise and Strengthen Your Ethical Core

PRSay

Each September, PRSA recognizes Public Relations Ethics Month, supported by programs presented by the PRSA Board of Ethics and Professional Standards (BEPS). This year’s theme, Public Relations Ethics: Strengthening Our Core, guides a special focus on the six core values highlighted in the PRSA Code of Ethics.

Ethics 144
article thumbnail

What should you do when you think you received an unlawful order? Dave Honchul

Ethical Voices

He’s a public affairs specialist at the US Department of the Treasury and a docent at the National Museum of the US Air Force. He discusses a number of important ethics issues, including: What should you do when you think you received an unlawful order? What is the most difficult ethical challenge you ever confronted?

article thumbnail

An “Interview” with ChatGPT: What is Public Relations? How Has PR Changed? Will Artificial Intelligence Replace Comms Pros?

Sword and the Script

We interviewed ChatGPT about public relations and while it does well with high-level questions, it becomes repetitive when those questions were more nuanced; the system says it is “unlikely” that it “or any other AI system will fully replace public relations (PR) professionals”.

article thumbnail

15 years after: the collective “grilling” of Jim Grunig still delivers visionary insights on the future of PR

PR Conversations

By João Duarte, National Scientific Committee member, FERPILab 15 years ago, a group of PR scholars, practitioners, critics, and lecturers collectively challenged Jim Grunig to address some of the recurrent issues that emerged in the PR Conversations blog at that time.

article thumbnail

Maximising resilience of health and well-being assets in crisis situations

PR Conversations

A comment left by New Zealand PR consultant, Catherine Arrow , on a recent post on my personal Greenbanana blog indicated that the topic (the language of grief and a biopsychosocial perspective on mental health issues) was worthy of further investigation. I’m thinking here of three examples I’ve encountered this week.

Crisis 63
article thumbnail

Examining the (weird) science of communication presentations

PR Conversations

Ethics experts in science or public relations have many interchangeable ideas and see the “public” through different lenses. I heard Catherine Keill speak when she was Hill+Knowlton Strategies Canada leader of its Alberta public affairs team. She also is well travelled.

article thumbnail

Examining the (weird) science of communication presentations

PR Conversations

Ethics experts in science or public relations have many interchangeable ideas and see the “public” through different lenses. I heard Catherine Keill speak when she was Hill+Knowlton Strategies Canada leader of its Alberta public affairs team. She also is well travelled.