Ethics Archives - WITNESS https://www.witness.org/tag/ethics/ Human Rights Video Tue, 16 Oct 2018 21:59:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 76151064 Workshop: Ethics vs Community Journalism https://www.witness.org/workshop-ethics-vs-community-journalism/ Wed, 10 Oct 2018 20:30:53 +0000 https://www.witness.org/?p=2195357 Join WITNESS U.S. Program Manager Jackie Zammuto on Saturday, October 20 in Brooklyn at a workshop that will explore the challenging ethical decisions that journalists and community reporters often face when sharing stories, testimony, and footage of human rights abuses.

Participants will engage with specific examples and walk away with practical guidance on how to navigate difficult ethical choices in their own work.

This workshop is part of the Brooklyn Media Maker Weekend, which is a free, three-day event that will celebrate community media and help you up your TV, film, and podcast game.

More information here.

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WITNESS Media Lab Launches “Capturing Hate” Report https://www.witness.org/witness-media-lab-launches-new-report-capturing-hate/ Tue, 25 Oct 2016 22:30:19 +0000 https://www.witness.org/?p=2191489 The WITNESS Media Lab is proud to announce the release of its latest report, Capturing Hate. This in-depth report takes a look at the current climate of hate against the LGBTQ community in the United States and aims to address the data shortfalls surrounding this issue of transphobic violence.

By sourcing, indexing and analyzing videos of violence against transgender and gender-nonconforming people that are taken and shared as entertainment, Capturing Hate looks to expose these patterns of discrimination and abuse and aims to equip advocacy groups and the media with the tools to more effectively and ethically use eyewitness videos to document and report on violence affecting the LGBTQ community.

To read more about the project, please click here.

To read the full Capturing Hate report, please click here.

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Madeleine Bair to Speak on “Designing Ethics in the Digital Age” at The Newseum in Washington D.C. November 19 https://www.witness.org/madeleine-bair-to-speak-on-designing-ethics-in-the-digital-age-at-the-newseum-in-washington-d-c-november-19/ Wed, 11 Nov 2015 18:55:13 +0000 https://www.witness.org/?p=1898040 On Thursday, November 19 Madeleine Bair of the WITNESS Media Lab will participate in a panel titled “Designing Ethics in the Digital Age” at The Newseum in Washington D.C. The panel is co-hosted by the Online News Association and The Newseum. Madeleine will be discussing WITNESS’ newly released resource “WITNESS’ Ethical Guidelines for Using Eyewitness Videos in Human Rights Documentation and Advocacy

The event is free, but registration is required. Register here.

Speakers

Madeleine Bair, WITNESS, @madbair / @witness_lab
Tom Kent, Associated Press, @tjrkent
Mark Memmott, NPR, @markmemmottNPR

Moderator

Gene Policinski, Newseum Institute, @Newseum

Time and Location

Thursday, November 19, 2015 from 3:00 PM to 5:00 PM (EST)

Newseum – 555 Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest. Documentary Theater, Concourse Level. Washington, DC 20001

 

 

 

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Columbia Journalism Review Reports on How News Outlets and Audiences Deal with Graphic Imagery https://www.witness.org/columbia-journalism-review-reports-on-how-news-outlets-and-audiences-deal-with-graphic-imagery/ Wed, 30 Sep 2015 15:19:37 +0000 https://www.witness.org/?p=1897731 WITNESS Program Director, Sam Gregory, recently participated in a panel discussion about how news outlets and audiences are dealing with increased access to graphic footage via our digital, social interactions.

The Columbia Journalism Review reported on the panel:

Viewers have more opportunities—some of them unavoidable—to stumble onto graphic content. This shift demands serious attention from news organizations. That’s compounded by the potential for psychological harm to journalists, whose jobs require them to work, sometimes extensively, with traumatic material. The answers aren’t simple, but the problems are clear.

CJR recapped comments from the four panel experts and concluded with Sam’s comments:

People who are not professional journalists upload much of this content, Gregory says. It’s unmediated and free to stream across the internet. A major problem arises when these images jump outside  their original context. Not only does that practice open the door to resharing false information, but it transports graphic material that had a specific purpose: to energize, enrage, or educate a particular community. “We see it in front of us, and we’re like, ‘Wow, that is horrendous,’ and often we’re missing the context around it,” he says. “I think that’s part of why we’re feeling confronted now.”

Read more about WITNESS’ perspective on when and how to share graphic imagery and how to contextualize it.

For journalists and human rights advocates, check out our new resource “Ethical Guidelines: Using Eyewitness Videos in Human Rights Reporting & Advocacy.”

Featured image via CJR.

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PANEL: “Death and the Social Web” – Sept. 21st 2015 https://www.witness.org/panel-death-and-the-social-web-sept-21st-2015/ Fri, 18 Sep 2015 20:07:13 +0000 https://www.witness.org/?p=1897643 On Monday September 21st, WITNESS program director Sam Gregory will be participating in a panel titled “Death and the Social Web” hosted by  Tow Center for Digital Journalism and the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma at Columbia University in New York City.

Details:

Monday, September 21, 2015
Pulitzer Hall – Brown Institute for Media Innovation
6:15 pm – 8:00 pm

RSVP via Eventbrite here (recommended)

Full description:

This year we’ve seen a number of people die on our screens, from the police officer Ahmed Merabet shot in Paris after the Charlie Hebdo attacks, to Walter Scott shot in the back as he ran from police in Charleston, to Alison Parker and Adam Ward shot live on air. We’ve seen CCTV footage of a woman ‘sucked’ into a faulty escalator in China, a live Periscope stream of the immediate aftermath of the Bangkok bombing, and images of refugee children washed onto Libyan beaches.

This panel discussion will examine the issues raised by death on the social web. Should audiences be protected from these images? Does responsibility differ for news organizations versus the social platforms? Are journalists and audiences becoming desensitized? What can we learn from history about similar ‘moment of death’ images? How does culture play into what is acceptable or not?

The panel will be moderated by Emily Bell, Director of the Tow Center for Digital Journalism.  The event’s panelists include:

Sam Gregory
Program Director, Witness

Louise Roug
Global News Editor, Mashable

Bruce Shapiro
Executive Director, Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma
Senior Executive Director of Professional Programs, Columbia Journalism School

Barbie Zelizer
Raymond Williams Professor of Communication
Director, Scholars Program in Culture and Communication
Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania


For more from WITNESS on the questions surrounding how to ethically share graphic images of human rights abuses online, check out these recent blog posts by Sam Gregory:

Seeing Aylan Kurdi, Adam Ward and Alison Parker

Images of Horror: Whose Roles and What Responsibilities?

Featured image: Syrian refugees Alan and Galip Kurdi. Both boys drowned in the Mediterranean Sea while attempting to reach Greece with their parents earlier this month. Image via The BBC.

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