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Ethical and Legal Media Issues

Media
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Ethical and Legal Media Issues

Media
01 May 2026

Media professionals and media organisations operate within a framework of both legal obligations and ethical expectations. Understanding the distinction between these two registers — and the specific issues that arise within each — is essential for Unit 4.

Dimension Legal Issues Ethical Issues
Source Legislation, common law, court decisions Professional codes of conduct, community standards, moral philosophy
Enforcement Courts, regulatory bodies, police Professional bodies, public opinion, editorial oversight
Consequence Fines, damages, injunctions, imprisonment Reputation damage, editorial sanction, professional exclusion
Scope What is prohibited What is responsible and appropriate

Something can be legal but unethical (e.g. publishing private grief photographs of a person who has not consented but has no legal protection). Something can be illegal but widely considered ethically acceptable in some contexts (e.g. publishing classified documents exposing government wrongdoing — see WikiLeaks, Edward Snowden).

Defamation

Defamation law protects individuals from false statements of fact that damage their reputation:
- Published material that is factually incorrect and harmful to reputation may give rise to a defamation claim
- Defences include: truth (justification), honest opinion (previously called ‘fair comment’), and public interest
- Australia: unified national Defamation Act (2005, amended 2021) — added public interest defence and ‘serious harm’ threshold

Privacy

Australian law provides limited privacy protections in media contexts:
- No general tort of invasion of privacy in most Australian jurisdictions
- Privacy Act 1988 applies to some media organisations (those with annual turnover over $3M)
- Courts have used breach of confidence and copyright law to provide limited protection
- Ethical codes often provide stronger privacy protections than law

Media producers must not reproduce copyrighted material without permission:
- Copyright protects films, photographs, music, written works, and broadcasts
- ‘Fair dealing’ exception allows use for news reporting, criticism/review, and research
- User-generated content that incorporates copyrighted material (music, clips) may constitute infringement

Contempt of Court

Publishing material that prejudices a fair trial or interferes with judicial proceedings:
- Reporting on ongoing criminal trials can prejudice jury decisions
- Sub judice rule: once charges are laid, extensive pre-trial coverage of the accused’s alleged conduct may be contemptuous

Key Ethical Issues

  • Journalists have an ethical obligation to protect confidential sources
  • Filming or recording individuals without their knowledge raises consent issues
  • Using images of vulnerable people (children, victims of crime, mental illness) requires heightened ethical care

Accuracy and Verification

  • The ethical obligation to verify information before publication is tested by the speed of digital media
  • Publishing unverified social media content as news has resulted in significant errors and harms
  • The Australian Press Council Standards of Practice require publications to take reasonable steps to ensure accuracy

Conflicts of Interest

  • Journalists or media organisations with financial, political, or personal interests in a story have an ethical obligation to disclose these
  • Advertorials (paid content presented as editorial) must be clearly labelled

Representation of Sensitive Communities

  • Ethical guidelines (e.g. MEAA Code of Ethics) require particular care in representations of Indigenous Australians, victims of crime, people with mental illness, and children
  • Sensationalist representation of suicide (‘contagion’ effect) is subject to both ethical guidelines and recommendations from mental health organisations

VCAA FOCUS: Know the difference between legal issues (defamation, copyright, contempt) and ethical issues (source protection, consent, accuracy, conflict of interest). Be able to explain each with a specific example and discuss the tension between press freedom and the ethical/legal obligation in question.

EXAM TIP: The most sophisticated responses to questions about ethical and legal issues acknowledge the tensions involved — cases where legal compliance does not resolve the ethical question, or where ethical obligations conflict with each other. Name the specific code or law involved and use a real example to ground your argument.

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