THE
SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL
JOURNALISTS
Code of Ethics
Preamble
Members of the Society of
Professional Journalists believe that public
enlightenment is the forerunner of justice
and the foundation of democracy. The duty of
the journalist is to further those ends by
seeking truth and providing a fair and
comprehensive account of events and issues.
Conscientious journalists from all media and
specialties strive to serve the public with
thoroughness and honesty. Professional
integrity is the cornerstone of a
journalist's credibility. Members of the
Society share a dedication to ethical
behavior and adopt this code to declare the
Society's principles and standards of
practice.
Seek Truth and Report
It
Journalists should be
honest, fair and courageous in gathering,
reporting and interpreting information.
Journalists should:
- Test the accuracy of information from all
sources and exercise care to avoid
inadvertent error. Deliberate distortion
is never permissible.
- Diligently seek out subjects of news
stories to give them the opportunity to
respond to allegations of wrongdoing.
- Identify sources whenever feasible. The
public is entitled to as much information
as possible on sources' reliability.
- Always question sources motives
before promising anonymity. Clarify
conditions attached to any promise made
in exchange for information. Keep
promises.
- Make certain that headlines, news teases
and promotional material, photos, video,
audio, graphics, sound bites and
quotations do not misrepresent. They
should not oversimplify or highlight
incidents out of context.
- Never distort the content of news photos
or video. Image enhancement for technical
clarity is always permissible. Label
montages and photo illustrations.
- Avoid misleading re-enactments or staged
news events. If re-enactment is necessary
to tell a story, label it.
- Avoid undercover or other surreptitious
methods of gathering information except
when traditional open methods will not
yield information vital to the public.
Use of such methods should be explained
as part of the story.
- Never plagiarize.
- Tell the story of the diversity and
magnitude of the human experience boldly,
even when it is unpopular to do so.
- Examine their own cultural values and
avoid imposing those values on others.
- Avoid stereotyping by race, gender, age,
religion, ethnicity, geography, sexual
orientation, disability, physical
appearance or social status.
- Support the open exchange of views, even
views they find repugnant.
- Give voice to the voiceless; official and
unofficial sources of information can be
equally valid.
- Distinguish between advocacy and news
reporting. Analysis and commentary should
be labeled and not misrepresent fact or
context.
- Distinguish news from advertising and
shun hybrids that blur the lines between
the two.
- Recognize a special obligation to ensure
that the public's business is conducted
in the open and that government records
are open to inspection.
Minimize Harm
Ethical journalists
treat sources, subjects and colleagues as human
beings deserving of respect.
Journalists should:
- Show compassion for those who may be
affected adversely by news coverage. Use
special sensitivity when dealing with
children and inexperienced sources or
subjects.
- Be sensitive when seeking or using
interviews or photographs of those
affected by tragedy or grief.
- Recognize that gathering and reporting
information may cause harm or discomfort.
Pursuit of the news is not a license for
arrogance.
- Recognize that private people have a
greater right to control information
about themselves than do public officials
and others who seek power, influence or
attention. Only an overriding public need
can justify intrusion into anyones
privacy.
- Show good taste. Avoid pandering to lurid
curiosity.
- Be cautious about identifying juvenile
suspects or victims of sex crimes.
- Be judicious about naming criminal
suspects before the formal filing of
charges.
- Balance a criminal suspects fair
trial rights with the publics right
to be informed.
Act Independently
Journalists should be
free of obligation to any interest other than the
public's right to know.
Journalists should:
- Avoid conflicts of interest, real or
perceived.
- Remain free of associations and
activities that may compromise integrity
or damage credibility.
- Refuse gifts, favors, fees, free travel
and special treatment, and shun secondary
employment, political involvement, public
office and service in community
organizations if they compromise
journalistic integrity.
- Disclose unavoidable conflicts.
- Be vigilant and courageous about holding
those with power accountable.
- Deny favored treatment to advertisers and
special interests and resist their
pressure to influence news coverage.
- Be wary of sources offering information
for favors or money; avoid bidding for
news.
Be Accountable
Journalists are
accountable to their readers, listeners, viewers
and each other.
Journalists should:
- Clarify and explain news coverage and
invite dialogue with the public over
journalistic conduct.
- Encourage the public to voice grievances
against the news media.
- Admit mistakes and correct them promptly.
- Expose unethical practices of journalists
and the news media.
- Abide by the same high standards to which
they hold others.
Sigma Delta
Chis first Code of Ethics was borrowed from
the American Society of Newspaper Editors in
1926. In 1973, Sigma Delta Chi wrote its own
code, which was revised in 1984 and 1987. The
present version of the Society of Professional
Journalists Code of Ethics was adopted in
September 1996.