Ethics and the Law Flashcards
How ethical principles and the law apply to the PR practice
The general underlying principles of ethics in PR
- Act in the public interest
- Use honesty and integrity as your guide.
- Avoid actual or apparent conflicts of interest.
- Ensure truth and accuracy
- Deal fairly with all publics
Additional principles of ethics in PR
- Do not guarantee results for areas beyond your control.
- Maintain the integrity of the communications channels
- Safeguard confidences
- Do not damage the reputation of others
- Avoid conflicts of interest
The 6 steps for making an ethical decision
- Define the specific ethical issue or conflict
- Identify internal and external factors that may influence the decision
- Identify key values that should guide your thinking
- Identify individuals and publics who will be affected by the decision and define your obligations to each
- Select ethical principles to guide your decision-making process
- Mak your decision and justify it.
Addresses political or social issues and has First Amendment protection.
Corporate speech
Deals with a transaction or desire for profit. Has fewer legal protections. The FTC can fine public relations practitioners for misleading or incorrect information included in news releases or other promotional messages
Commercial speech
Gives citizens aces to much of the information that the federal government collects.
Freedom of Information Act
Governs the information the federal government may keep on individuals.
Privacy Act
Limits disclosure of an individual’s medical information by health care and insurance providers
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPPA)
Established to protect the original creator of a work and to provide an economic incentive for new knowledge.
Copyright law
An author who creates a tangible expression of ideas acquires this right to ownership until the author dedicates work to the public by a general publication or surrenders this right
Common law copyright
The overt act that indicates the intention to surrender one’s right to control one’s creative expression and allow the public to copy the material. If the author has not secured statutory copyright and does not use the copyright symbol, the author has no further right to prevent use by the public.
General publication
Delivery of a manuscript to a possible purchaser, with no loss of common law rights to the author
Limited publication
When an author submits their works to the LIbrary of Congress and displays the copyright symbol on the material
Statutory copyright
The contract between an organization and a nonemployee who takes photos, creates artwork or writes text determines who owns the copyright.
Ownership of copyright for work by contractors, employees
Untruth that damages reputation
Defamation