Ethical Space Vol. 22 Issue 1/2
Glenda Cooper, Tom Bradshaw

softback
6.69x9.61 inches (170x244 mm)
192 pages
ISBN: 9781845498474
Ethical Space Vol. 22 Issue 1/2
Editorial

Free expression, Silicon Valley and democratic disruption - by Tom Bradshaw and Glenda Cooper
Papers

  • Artificial intelligence's implications for freedom of expression: Different institutional approaches to ensure a responsible use of AI in journalism - by Colin Porlezza
  • The applicability of neomedievalism, technofeudalism and sovereignty in contemporary internet governance - by Gergely Gosztonyi and Dorina Gyetván
  • Arab journalists and the social media threat - by Zahera Harb
  • Online misogyny and the manosphere: Defending discourses of 'free speech' within the alt-right and beyond - by Shelby Judge and John Steel
  • First Amendment fundamentalism without the First Amendment (or a constitution) - by Julian Petley
  • Stand-up comedy and the ethics of freedom of expression - by Neil Washbourne
  • Anthropological realism: Ethics for the whole human - by Stephen J.A. Ward

Articles

  • The story behind the adoption of the UN Plan of Action on the Safety of Journalists and the issue of impunity - by Ivor Gaber
  • Assange finally freed - but global threats to press freedom continue - by Richard Lance Keeble

Plus

Tribute

Martin Conboy: 'Always robust at challenging power structures' - by Richard Lance Keeble
Papers

  • 'Fixers' as journalists: The emotional labour of locally hired news gatherers in Afghanistan who work for foreign correspondents - by Richard Pendry

Article

  • Confronting the ethical dilemmas of 'behaviour change' drama - by Robert David

Book reviews

Jennifer Martin on Dear Mutzi by Tess Scholfield-Peters; Richard Lance Keeble on A history of tabloid journalism, by Terry Kirby, and Believe nothing until it is officially denied: Claud Cockburn and the invention of guerrilla journalism, by Patrick Cockburn
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