[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] The Future of Media Ethics
Fri Nov 25 16:30:12 GMT 2016
The Future of Media Ethics
University of Helsinki, Finland
Date: Friday, 9 December 2016
Time: 9:00 - 17:00
Venue: Auditorium XIII, The main building of the University of Helsinki,
Unioninkatu 34.
The participation in the conference is free of charge. Refreshments will
be served during the coffee break. Please register by 2 December 2016.
Registration link: https://elomake.helsinki.fi/lomakkeet/75226/lomake.html
Description: Over the last two decades or so, the long-established
fundamentals of media ethics have come under increasingly intense
scrutiny, leading to a veritable boom of new perspectives on familiar
problems as well as novel questions that seem to challenge our very
understanding of what "media ethics" is or what it may become. Driving
this process is the perception that the professional and technological
underpinnings of media ethics have undergone and are undergoing
significant transformations, coupled with the suspicion that the
normative frameworks developed in the 20th century are not up to the
task of answering the ethical questions posed by digitalisation,
globalisation, evolving journalistic practices, and changes in everyday
uses of media. The proposed responses have ranged from moderate
revisions of extant principles to more sweeping reforms of the
professional procedures and academic theories of media ethics - all the
way to a deeper scepticism regarding the usefulness of ethical codes for
journalists and other media practitioners, now and in the future.
What is the outlook for media ethics in professional self-regulation
and as a field of applied ethics? This one-day symposium seeks to
advance discussion about the problems and prospects ahead. It will
address questions such as: What are the central ethical problems facing
media practitioners and media users today? Can we get along by amending
extant principles, or does the situation call for more radical measures
and new ethical frameworks? Will future media ethics still be primarily
preoccupied with questions of professionalism and news media, or is it
time to redraw the boundaries of this sub-field in view of the "new
moral problems" that have emerged in the digital media landscape? What
will become of such long-cherished norms as truth-telling, objectivity,
and fairness? Are we witnessing the return of partisan media and an
acceptance of open activism - and if we are, what ethical ideals are
then to be maintained, promoted, and taught? What are the media-ethical
implications of the current boom in "fake news" and resurgent
nationalism? Can there be a global media ethics, or are we rather
heading toward growing cultural fragmentation, do-it-yourself ethics,
and scepticism regarding universal values?
The conference is co-organised by the Communicative Pragmatism and
Reasonable Pluralism research project (financed by the Academy of
Finland), the Pragmatic Objectivity research project (financed by the
Helsingin Sanomat Foundation), the Master's Programme in Media and
Global Communication at the University of Helsinki, and the Philosophy
of Communication section of the European Communication Research and
Education Association.
Programme
9:00-9:10 Introduction: Media Ethics in a "Post-Truth World"? Mats
Bergman (Senior Lecturer, University of Helsinki)
9:10-10:00 Disrupting Journalism Ethics: Radical Construction of a
Digital, Global Ethic. Stephen J. A. Ward (Distinguished Lecturer in
Ethics, University of British Columbia)
10:00-10:20 Coffee
10:20-11:10 Journalism Ethics in the Age of Trump. Barbie Zelizer
(Professor of Communication, Annenberg School for Communication /
Helsingin Sanomat Foundation Fellow, Helsinki Collegium for Advanced
Studies)
11:10-12:00 Stories, Memes and Lies: How Mainstream Journalism Changed
Its Standards and Enabled the Rise of the Fake Media
Hanna Nikkanen (Visiting Professor of Journalism, University of Tampere)
12:00-13:20 Lunch break
13:20-14:10 Everything Old Is New Again: The Ethics of Information,
Virtue, and Care in ICT design, Engineering, and Research
Charles Ess (Professor in Media Studies, University of Oslo)
14:10-15:00 Ethics in Our Era of Information War - Questions, Proposals
and Practicalities
Elina Melgin (Managing Director, ProCom - the Finnish Association of
Communications Professionals)
15:00-15:20 Coffee
15:20-16:10 International Dimension of Media Ethics: The Challenge for
Journalism Education
Kaarle Nordenstreng (Professor Emeritus, University of Tampere)
16:10-17:00 Whose Fault Was This? Media Ethics beyond Media Elites
Henrik Rydenfelt (Postdoctoral Researcher, University of Eastern Finland)
---------------
ECREA-Mailing list
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier and ECREA.
--
To subscribe, post or unsubscribe, please visit
http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
--
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
Chaussee de Waterloo 1151, 1180 Uccle, Belgium
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]