Quantcast Media Ethics Magazine
Media Ethics online
The Magazine Serving Mass Communications Ethics
Home Analyses/ Commentary News Ethicalia Book Reviews ME Masthead Opportunities Contact Us

Search InstructionsSearch by Topic/AuthorSearch by Back Issue

STAFF LOGIN
College Publisher

ME online
is the web version of the print edition of
Media Ethics.  Although some graphics might be omitted, and the calendar may be updated from time to time, the text presented here is the same as that in the print edition. The editor of Media Ethics is John Michael Kittross, but comments on the online edition should be directed to Manny Paraschos.

Media Ethics welcomes any and all contributions. All submitted manuscripts are subject to editing at the discretion of the editor. Because of our editorial policies of independence and inclusion, neither the sponsors nor the editor or publishers shall be held responsible for any views expressed in Media Ethics by authors or others, or for their own follies. Photographs often are digitally altered. Unless otherwise specified, authors and photographers retain all copyrights to their work, subject only to print and electronic publication by Media Ethics itself.

Aljazeera Code of Ethics

  • Page 1 of 1
Almost from its inception, MEDIA ETHICS has published codes of ethical practice associated with mass media professions and organizations. The first of these was the 1987 Radio-Television News Directors Association code, accompanied by a debate between Jeffrey A. Marks and John Michael Kittross that was published both in MEDIA ETHICS and in RTNDA Communicator. The most recently published code was the new Boston Globe Standards for Ethics and Accuracy published in the fall of 2003.

Although the codes of many organizations (such as Fox News and ABC) are too detailed and too lengthy to be published in these pages, and some are considered confidential "inside" documents, we intend to continue publishing any appropriate documents of this sort that come to our attention.

On this page is the English language edition of the standards espoused by Aljazeera, the globally distributed Middle Eastern television news channel. (For more about Aljazeera, the motion picture
Control Room is recommended). Compare these standards with the RTNDA code elsewhere on this Website.

Being a globally oriented media service, Aljazeera shall determinedly adopt the following code of ethics in pursuance of the vision and mission it has set for itself:

1. Adhere to the journalistic values of honesty, courage, fairness, balance, independence, credibility and diversity, giving no priority to commercial or political considerations over professional ones.

2. Endeavour to get to the truth and declare it in our dispatches, programmes and news bulletins unequivocally in a manner which leaves no doubt about its validity and accuracy.

3. Treat our audiences with due respect and address every issue or story with due attention to present a clear, factual and accurate picture while giving full consideration to the feelings of victims of crime, war, persecution and disaster, their relatives and our viewers, and to individual privacy and public decorum.

4. Welcome fair and honest media competition without allowing it to affect adversely our standards of performance so that getting a "scoop" will not become an end in itself.

5. Present diverse points of view and opinions without bias or partiality.

6. Recognise diversity in human societies with all their races, cultures and beliefs and their values and intrinsic individualities in order to present unbiased and faithful reflection of them.

7. Acknowledge a mistake when it occurs, promptly correct it and ensure it does not recur.

8. Observe transparency in dealing with news and news sources while adhering to internationally established practices concerning the rights of these sources.

9. Distinguish between news material, opinion and analysis to avoid the pitfalls of speculation and propaganda.

10. Stand by colleagues in the profession and offer them support when required, particularly in light of the acts of aggression and harassment to which journalists are subjected at times. Cooperate with Arab and international journalistic unions and associations to defend freedom of the press.

Thursday 15 July 2004, 20:45 Makka Time, 17:45 GMT

* The Aljazeera Code of Ethics was announced July 12, 2004. For a copy, see http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/07256105-B2FC-439A-B255-D830BB238EA1.htm. Reprinted courtesy of English.Aljazeera.net.



The above article was published in Media Ethics , Fall 2004 (16:1), p. 11.
Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

Media Ethics is independent. It is editorially eclectic, and the sponsors are not responsible for its content. It strives to provide a forum for opinion and research articles on media ethics, as well as a venue for announcements and reviews of meetings, opportunities, and publications.


ME

sponsors:




Union University

The Kegley Institute of Ethics

Indiana University School of Journalism>

Brigham Young University

The Silha Center for the Study of Media Ethics and Law, University of Minnesota

The Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation

The Institute of Communications Research at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Universidad de Navarra Facultad de Comunicación

Institute of General Semantics

Emerson College