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Journal of Mass Media Ethics
Exploring Questions of Media Morality
Volume 20, 2005 - Issue 1
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Original Articles

What Journalists and Researchers Have in Common About Ethics

Pages 77-89 | Published online: 22 Nov 2010
 

Abstract

The past several decades have seen an increase in the concern for the treatment of human participants in research. Similarly, the ways journalists treat their subjects and sources have generated much concern. The ethics of these 2 endeavors share much in common, because both must use people in various ways to reach their goals. The well-developed guidelines in research designed to protect research participants' autonomy, to guard against needless deception, and to recognize the special needs of vulnerable research participants have direct application to journalism. They can provide easy reference heuristics for journalists to use in making ethical decisions.

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