ID: |
HARP-507 |
Title: |
Responsibility and Ethics in the Canadian Media: Some Basic Concerns |
Source: |
Journal of Mass Media Ethics, 2002, Vol. 17 Issue 1, p35, 18p |
Parties: |
|
Dispute Resolution Organ: |
|
Year: |
2002 |
Pages: |
0 |
Author(s): |
Raphael Cohen-Almagor |
Keywords: |
Canada, culture, freedom of expression, human rights, United States, US, civil and political rights, print media, media, right to privacy |
Abstract: |
In this article I analyze some of the troubling issues in Canadian media ethics, based on in-depth interviews with more than 50 experts on Canadian media. I begin by reflecting on the cultural considerations involved in the Canadian media’s proximity to the United States. Subsequently, I discuss the problems of excessive ownership of the media by a few organizations, arguing that the right to exercise free expression does not include the right to own as many media organizations as money can buy. In this context are considered the work of two Royal Commissions: the 1970 Davey Commission and the 1980 Kent Commission. Finally, I am concerned with excessive intrusion of individual privacy. When news becomes entertainment (infotainment) and private stories become public spectacle, individual lives can be mercilessly exposed to the glaring spotlight of unwanted publicity. In delineating the boundaries of intrusion, there is a need to distinguish between public figures and ordinary citizens, and between those who choose to live in the spotlight and ordinary citizens who stumble into the public eye. |
Secured: |
False |
Download Article: |
Available here |
Keywords: Canada, civil and political rights, culture, freedom of expression, human rights, media, print media, right to privacy, United States/USA