Global media ethics revisited:
A postcolonial critique
Source
doi: 10.1177/1742766507074358 Global Media and Communication April 2007 vol. 3 no. 1 29-50
Abstract
Little theoretical work from non-Western
perspectives has entered the epistemological discussion of universal
ethical principles
for media and journalism. The increased analysis of
media globalization requires a closer examination of the ethical
principles
being advocated by media theorists. We use
postcolonial theory to argue that advocates of universal media ethics
need to take
into account the history of colonialism,
differences of powers between nations and peoples, and the importance of
indigenous
theory. We contend that in the non-Western world
underlying conditions of postcoloniality and indigenous values influence
how media professionals and journalists make
ethical decisions. These interpretations present an epistemic challenge
to dominant
ethical concepts based primarily on Western
Enlightenment philosophies. The article concludes with a discussion of
two specific
ethical theories, ubuntu from South Africa and ahimsa from India, which illustrate the importance of indigenous knowledge in the search for global media ethics.
Keywords
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