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The second volume of Ethics for a Digital Age contains a selection of research presented at the fifth and sixth Annual International Symposia on Digital Ethics hosted by the Center for Digital Ethics and Policy at Loyola University Chicago's School of Communication. Thematically organized around the most pressing ethical issues of the digital age from a professional (parts one and two) and a philosophical perspective (part three), the chapters of this volume offer the reader a window into some of the hot-button ethical issues facing a society where digital has become the new normal. Just as…mehr
The second volume of Ethics for a Digital Age contains a selection of research presented at the fifth and sixth Annual International Symposia on Digital Ethics hosted by the Center for Digital Ethics and Policy at Loyola University Chicago's School of Communication. Thematically organized around the most pressing ethical issues of the digital age from a professional (parts one and two) and a philosophical perspective (part three), the chapters of this volume offer the reader a window into some of the hot-button ethical issues facing a society where digital has become the new normal. Just as was the case in the first volume, this collection attempts to bridge applied and theoretical approaches to digital ethics. The case studies in this work are grounded in theory and the theoretical pieces are linked back to specific cases, reflecting the multi-methodological and multi-disciplinarian approach espoused by Loyola's Center of Digital Ethics and Policy during its eight years of existence. With contributions by experts from a variety of academic disciplines, this work will appeal to philosophers, communication scientists, and moral philosophers alike.
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Autorenporträt
Bastiaan Vanacker is an associate professor at the School of Communication at Loyola University Chicago, where he also serves as Program Director of the Center for Digital Ethics and Policy. His research focuses on journalism ethics and law. Don Heider is the founding dean of the School of Communication at Loyola University Chicago. He also helped found the Center for Digital Ethics and Policy. He is the author or editor of six books, as well as a former journalist who has won five Emmy awards for his work.
Inhaltsangabe
Don Heider: Foreword - Part I: Trust, Privacy, and Corporate Responsibility - David Kamerer: Introduction to Part I - Susan Currie Sivek Media That Know How You Feel: The Ethics of Emotion Analytics in Consumer Media - Joseph W. Jerome/Bénédicte Dambrine: The Intersection of Trust and Privacy in the Sharing Economy - Heidi A. McKee and James E. Porter: Corporate Response to Employee Social Media Missteps: A Rhetorical and Ethical Lens - Part II: Technology, Ethics, and the Shifting Role of Journalism - Jill Geisler: Introduction to Part II - Kathleen Bartzen Culver: Drones in the National Airspace - Chad Painter and Patrick Ferrucci: Normative Journalistic Roles in the Digital Age - Stephen J. A. Ward: Radical Journalism Ethics: Constructing an Ethic for Digital, Global Media - Part III: Ethics and Ontology - Bastiaan Vanacker: Introduction to Part III - Mathias Klang and Nora Madison: Vigilantism or Outrage: An Exploration of Policing Social Norms through Social Media - David J. Gunkel: The Machine Question: Can or Should Machines Have Rights? - Timothy H. Engström: Making and Managing Bodies: The Computational Turn, Ethics, and Governance - David S. Allen: Spatial Ethics and the Public Forum: Protecting the Process of Creating Public Space and Meaning - Bastiaan Vanacker: Concluding Remarks: Digital Ethics: Where to Go from Here? - Contributors.
Don Heider: Foreword - Part I: Trust, Privacy, and Corporate Responsibility - David Kamerer: Introduction to Part I - Susan Currie Sivek Media That Know How You Feel: The Ethics of Emotion Analytics in Consumer Media - Joseph W. Jerome/Bénédicte Dambrine: The Intersection of Trust and Privacy in the Sharing Economy - Heidi A. McKee and James E. Porter: Corporate Response to Employee Social Media Missteps: A Rhetorical and Ethical Lens - Part II: Technology, Ethics, and the Shifting Role of Journalism - Jill Geisler: Introduction to Part II - Kathleen Bartzen Culver: Drones in the National Airspace - Chad Painter and Patrick Ferrucci: Normative Journalistic Roles in the Digital Age - Stephen J. A. Ward: Radical Journalism Ethics: Constructing an Ethic for Digital, Global Media - Part III: Ethics and Ontology - Bastiaan Vanacker: Introduction to Part III - Mathias Klang and Nora Madison: Vigilantism or Outrage: An Exploration of Policing Social Norms through Social Media - David J. Gunkel: The Machine Question: Can or Should Machines Have Rights? - Timothy H. Engström: Making and Managing Bodies: The Computational Turn, Ethics, and Governance - David S. Allen: Spatial Ethics and the Public Forum: Protecting the Process of Creating Public Space and Meaning - Bastiaan Vanacker: Concluding Remarks: Digital Ethics: Where to Go from Here? - Contributors.
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