Ethics Theories
By: Fatih • Essay • 478 Words • February 27, 2010 • 864 Views
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Kevin Faini
Communication Ethics
Professional Code Paper
January 26, 2006
Being a future Public Relations Practitioner, I chose the Public Relations Society of America’s Code of Ethics to help answer the assigned questions dealing with professional code. The code I am using was adopted in 2000 and is the set of code that all Public Relations Society member is instructed to use in order to carry out their work in an ethically responsible nature.
1) The five requirements of an ethical system are all supported by the PRSA code. All practitioners hold shared values such as honesty, loyalty and fairness to its publics, and expertise in their field. This meaning that all PRSA members understand their responsibility to offer accurate and truthful information that is relevant to the public’s interests. Basically, all practitioners who abide by these codes agree to be truthful with all of their publics about matters that may or may not directly affect them and their interests. If false information is ever given, it is the practitioner’s responsibility for producing it, and they are held accountable for their actions. Through these codes, the Public Relations Society of America’s Code of Ethics successfully addresses the five requirements of an ethical system: Wisdom, Justice, Accountability, Freedom, and Shared values.
2, 3, 4) The Public Relations Code of Ethics is extremely intent on hammering home the idea that honesty and fair service to your publics is the essential element of the public relations field. There is a code of advocacy that states that practitioners serve the public interest by acting as a responsible advocate for those they