Media and Public Shaming: Drawing the Boundaries of Disclosure

Media and Public Shaming: Drawing the Boundaries of Disclosure

by Julian Petley
Media and Public Shaming: Drawing the Boundaries of Disclosure

Media and Public Shaming: Drawing the Boundaries of Disclosure

by Julian Petley

Hardcover

$150.00 
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Overview

"The media today, and especially the national press, are frequently in conflict with people in the public eye, particularly politicians and celebrities, over the disclosure of private information and behaviour. Historically, journalists have argued that 'naming and shaming' serious wrong-doing and behaviour on the part of public officials is justified as being in the public interest. However, when the media spotlight is shone on perfectly legal personal behaviour, family issues and sexual orientation, and when, in particular, this involves ordinary people, the question arises of whether such matters are really in the 'public interest' in any meaningful sense of the term. In this book, leading academics, commentators and journalists from a variety of different cultures, consider the extent to which the media are entitled to reveal details of people's private lives, the laws and regulations which govern such revelations, and whether these are still relevant in the age of social media."--Publisher's website.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781780765860
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 06/30/2013
Series: Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Julian Petley, Professor of Jourbanalism and Screen Media, School of Arts, Brunel University, London, England.

Table of Contents

Introduction
• To Punish, Inform and Criticize: The Goals of Naming and Shaming
• Public interest or public shaming
• The right of the press to know or the individual right to privacy
• Privacy and the freedom of the press: A false Dichotomy
• Disclosure and public shaming in the digital age
• Public shaming of individuals and companies through social media
• Differences in self-disclosure among cultures: A comparative study in social networking
• Comparing crime rituals in Sweden, Holland, England, and North America
• The DSK scandal: Mediating the Desire for Authenticity
• Public Interest and Individual taste in reporting an Irish minister's illness
• Public figures, privacy and co-regulation: The David Campbell affair
• Naming and shaming an innocent man: Allegations against John Leslie
• British Journalism after the News of the World

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