ABSTRACT

The Handbook of Communication Ethics serves as a comprehensive guide to the study of communication and ethics. It brings together analyses and applications based on recognized ethical theories as well as those outside the traditional domain of ethics but which engage important questions of power, equality, and justice. The work herein encourages readers to make important connections between matters of social justice and ethical theory. This volume makes an unparalleled contribution to the literature of communication studies, through consolidating knowledge about the multiple relationships between communication and ethics; by systematically treating areas of application; and by introducing explicit and implicit examinations of communication ethics to one another.

The Handbook takes an international approach, analyzing diverse cultural contexts and comparative assessments. The chapters in this volume cover a wide range of theoretical perspectives on communication and ethics, including feminist, postmodern and postcolonial; engage with communication contexts such as interpersonal and small group communication, journalism, new media, visual communication, public relations, and marketing; and explore contemporary issues such as democracy, religion, secularism, the environment, trade, law, and economics. The chapters also consider the dialectical tensions between theory and practice; academic and popular discourses; universalism and particularism; the global and the local; and rationality and emotion.

An invaluable resource for scholars in communication and related disciplines, the Handbook also serves as a main point of reference in graduate and upper-division undergraduate courses in communication and ethics. It stands as an exceptionally comprehensive resource for the study of communication and ethics.

 

part Unit 1|120 pages

Theory Old and New

chapter 4|19 pages

Situating a Dialogic Ethics

A Dialogic Confession

chapter 6|15 pages

Power and Ethics

chapter 7|20 pages

What Are We, Then?

Postmodernism, Globalization, and the Meta-Ethics of Contemporary Communication

chapter 8|14 pages

Decolonizing Communication Ethics

A Framework for Communicating Otherwise

part Unit 2|220 pages

Contexts of Application and Theory Development

chapter 11|24 pages

Communication Ethics and Organizational Contexts

Divergent Values and Moral Puzzles

chapter 14|20 pages

Public Relations and Marketing

Ethical Issues and Professional Practice in Society

chapter 17|20 pages

Political Communication Ethics

Postmodern Opportunities and Challenges

chapter 20|18 pages

Intercultural Communication Ethics

Multiple Layered Issues

part Unit 3|163 pages

Contemporary Issues

chapter 21|19 pages

Diversity, Identity, and Multiculturalism in the Media

The Case of Muslims in the British Press

chapter 22|13 pages

Hierarchies of Equality

Positive Peace in a Democratic Idiom

chapter 24|13 pages

Religion, State, and Secularism

How Should States Deal with Deep Religious Diversity?

chapter 25|22 pages

Truths, Evils, Justice, and the Event of Wild(er)ness

Using Badiou to Think the Ethics of Environmentalism

chapter 26|21 pages

Economic Justice and Communication Ethics

Considering Multiple Points of Intersection

chapter 27|18 pages

The Polyphony of Corporate Social Responsibility

Deconstructing Accountability and Transparency in the Context of Identity and Hypocrisy

chapter 28|19 pages

When Unreason Masquerades as Reason

Can Law Regulate Trade and Networked Communication Ethically?

chapter 29|22 pages

Response and Conclusion

A Vision of Applied Ethics for Communication Studies