This book examines the moral role of news media practitioners and
organizations, and applies a modified philosophical account of Virtue
Ethics as a framework for the role of journalists--and journalism
organizations--in public life. It shows how journalists and news
organizations that adopt an aim towards professional excellence (virtue)
by putting a premium on investigative journalism--with both large and
small measures depending on the nature of the reporting--can achieve
lofty professional goals under modern deadlines. The news media, both
electronic and traditional, are imperative to an informed public, and an
informed public is critical to a properly functioning cross-section of
social, government and corporate domains. The book emphasizes the
virtues of justice and integrity as foundational to professional
practice. It examines the modern ethical challenges presented by
organizations ranging from online upstarts to massive media
conglomerates, each that have economic challenges that can inhibit
professional excellence through corruption or corrosion. The author
applies his account of virtue--bolstered by suggestions for
complementary reforms in education and regulation--to improve an
ethically challenged industry as it undergoes significant technological
change.