This month marks the eight year anniversary of “Regret the Error,” which means I’ve been reporting on and writing about ethical issues in journalism for close to a decade.
That anniversary and this week’s Poynter symposium on journalism ethics in the digital age led me to step back and think about the principles that underpin ethical behavior in the profession, and how journalism ethics can and should evolve.
Rather than focusing on the usual concepts of accuracy, transparency and accountability, I found myself thinking more about humility, honesty, fairness, empathy and vulnerability.
Professional ethics are most effective when they flow from human values, emotions and, of course, action. It’s a perhaps obvious point, but one that is easily lost or overlooked at a time when new technologies recurve bows for sale have sparked change and disruption in journalism.
This understanding helps us distinguish between principles and practices, as Tom Rosenstiel and Kelly McBride noted toward the end of this week’s ethics symposium.
Technology has an increasingly important impact on our practices. But our principles must be technology agnostic.
I’ve attended my share of events about ethics, and, setting aside my obvious bias toward Poynter, this week’s forum struck me as notable and effective for a few reasons.
One is that we discussed topics that almost never emerge at events of this nature: Gilad Lotan of SocialFlow talked about algorithms and ethics. danah boyd of Microsoft talked about the use of fear in the media and its impact on the public. Dan Gillmor of Arizona State University talked about the ethical implications of platforms such as Facebook and Twitter emerging as major players in the distribution and dissemination of news and information.
These are important issues and not the usual fare.
Encoding humanity
But the thing that was most satisfying, and for me most important, is that the event was full of moments where human concerns and values rose to the forefront of the discussion. It’s easy to get bogged down in practices and miss the principles that matter. Or to focus on principles that are too wedded to a given technology or profession.
I’m guilty of this. Accuracy is not an inherently human value. Corrections are not an ethical principle. For me they flow from honesty, humility and vulnerability. Those are principles. Accuracy and corrections are practices.
It’s important to encode a core element of humanity in the work we do, and how we do it.
Our goal as journalists isn’t just to inform the public, but in fact to connect with them through stories, shared experiences, and the important developments in our world. In order to enable that, we must act with humanity and with the values and emotions that inspire human connection.
That is the cornerstone of ethics for me.
Early on in this week’s summit, Rosenstiel reminded the group that ultimately the public determines what journalism succeeds. They dictate our success and failure by offering or denying attention and support. Here are a couple of attempts to paraphrase what he said:
Ethics come from the street & what works for audience. Disruption today coming from need to better understand the audience #PoynterEthics
— Craig Silverman (@CraigSilverman) October 23, 2012
Norms & ethics of journalism have grown in response to the public & the market, not from “planet journalism,” @tbr1 says. #PoynterEthics
— Steve Buttry (@stevebuttry) October 23, 2012
Advice: Stop living on Planet Journalism and start behaving like a human being.
I attempted to address the human aspect during my panel by using a word that rarely shows up in discussions about journalism: vulnerability.
Humans connect through vulnerability. News organizations should show vulnerability in order to connect, says @craigsilverman #PoynterEthics
— Erica Berger (@GoodBerger) October 23, 2012
To admit your errors is to show vulnerability. To show vulnerability is to enable yourself to be really seen. Our flaws are what connect us, not perfection. It’s true for humans, and that’s why it’s true for journalists and news organizations.
If we as journalists don’t own up to our mistakes, we don’t seem human and break trust, @CraigSilverman #poynterethics
— Meghan Peters (@petersmeg) October 23, 2012
.@moniguzman: For journalism, working w/ community can’t just be the means to an end, it must an essential part of the end. #poynterethics
— Tom Huang (@tomthuang) October 23, 2012
“To create a self-informed community is an incredible act of journalism” – @moniguzman just blew my mind on #poynterethics livestream
— Bethany Horne (@bbhorne) October 23, 2012
Clarity, nuance and empathy – @tomthuang talks values of storytelling #poynterethics
— Gina Joseph (@CisionNavigator) October 23, 2012
Empathy is a wonderfully human word and characteristic. Not surprisingly, it’s also core to storytelling and ethical storytelling.
At the end of the day, Rosenstiel and McBride encouraged participants to suggest the ethics and values that should inform a new draft of Poynter’s Guiding Principles for Journalism.
That led to perhaps my favorite tweet of the day:
Honesty, humility and compassion will connect journalists with their audiences #poynterethics
— Jonathan Bernstein (@bernsteincrisis) October 23, 2012
Human values and connection all wrapped together in one tweet.
During that final session, I drafted a few guiding principles that came to mind.
Ethical journalism means being:
- Responsive to feedback and new developments.
- Transparent about our relationships and limitations.
- Accountable for our mistakes and decisions.
- Open about our processes and sources.
- Committed to seeking truth through facts and credible information.
My original post with these principles included a disclaimer, “I want to emphasize that the above are not perfect. In fact, I feel as though they don’t address one really important point: the need for journalists to behave with empathy and common sense. But I don’t have a good formulation for that now.”
I struggled with articulating the most human of all the above principles.
Sometimes, it’s the things that seem most natural that are the hardest to express.
Related: Compassion is not journalism’s downfall, it’s journalism’s salvation
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