MCOM 301: Media Laws & Ethics

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A Brief Understanding about the Importance of Media: Media is the most powerful tool of communication. It helps promoting the right things on right time. It gives a real exposure to the mass audience about what is right or wrong. Even though media is linked with spreading fake news, but on the safe side, it helps a lot to inform us about the realities as well. The world is moving towards progress in every walk of life. But when we look towards societies, it feels as if something is still missing. Money, power, peace, etc., is the wish of every human being to attain. But we can't deny this fact that we all are bounded with loads of social problems, which are hard nuts to crack. Social issues are matters which directly or indirectly affect many or all members of a society and are considered to be problems, controversies related to moral values, or both. Social issues include poverty, violence, corruption, and bribery, suppression of human rights, discrimination, and crime, killing in the name of honor, etc. Media has a constructive role to play for the society. Today News Channels and even some newspapers are mouthpiece of some social issues, which helps us to estimate the realities of lives. Media has played an important role in order to focus on the social issues in almost every era. It is the fact that in most of the eras, media were not being given free and fair chances to explore the issues of society more openly than it is being given now; but we can't deny this fact that the issues were always raised in order to provide justice to the people. Pakistani Media has expanded its chain, and many cases and issues were brought under one umbrella, which showcase us that even today, we are bounded in the barriers of loads of problems and issues, which is to be sought out. Now, the time has arrived, when we need to re-think about our attitudes towards society. Since the media holds a significant place in our society so whatever comes on air goes viral and becomes the talk of the town. As you have understood the importance of media, don t you think something which is this much influential that can make, change and cultivate believes of the audiences should have some path to be followed and someone should be there to see if that track is being followed or not. So for that purpose our concern here would be on the laws that media is bound to obey, the laws that give media a guideline to run, a set of rules that control and regulate the media and not just the laws but the morals and ethics of host society where media persists. Before getting into the media laws and ethics we need to develop an understanding of laws and ethics in general. Compiled By: S. M. Saqib Page 1

Definition and Explanation of Law Law is the overall guiding principles of human conducts. A law is basically a body of principles or rules which are the basis of a society. Members of a society are meant to abide by the law established by it. It is very hard to have a society without a set of laws guiding it. Human life needs a proper rule of conduct or principle at every step. It is also important for a successful society. Law according to Oyakhilomen (2009), controls, regulates, enforces and punishes. It is very uncommon to have a society absolutely free of law, i.e. a state of anarchy. Whether consciously or unconsciously; written or unwritten; observed or violated; elements of law exist in every society. Oyakhilomen (2006) writes: Society cannot exist without rules of social order. Hence every civilized society has its publicly recognized authority for declaring, administering and enforcing its laws. There are various definitions of law by various law professionals and authors. Some of them are as follows: 1. A rule of conduct or procedure established by custom, agreement, or authority. 2. A code of principles based on morality, conscience, or nature. 3. A law is a rule of conduct of any organized society, however simple or small, that are enforced by threat of punishment if they are violated. Modern law has a wide sweep and regulates many branches of conduct. 4. A body of rules of conduct of legal force and effect, prescribed, recognised, and enforced by controlling authority. Origin of Law Law, according to some scholars, is as old as man. In Qur an chapter 2 verses 35 and 36, God created the first man, Adam and his wife, Eve (Hawaw) and put them in the paradise. God enacted law for them (the dos and the don ts) to serve as their guiding principles: And He said: O Adam! Dwell you and wife in the paradise and eat both of you freely with pleasure and delight, of things therein as wherever you will, but come not near this tree or you both will be of the wrongdoers. From this Quran verse, it is established that God enacted laws for the first man and his wife, which set for them the limit in the use of the provision in the paradise. God also stipulated the Compiled By: S. M. Saqib Page 2

measure for the violation of the laws and the punishment that goes along with it is stated in verse 36 of the same chapter. Similar quotation can be found in Bible. Another law that testifies to the earlier historical record of law is Mosaic laws (10 commandments) in the Old Testament. Whether divine or man- made, law is law, once it satisfies all or any of the conditions highlighted in Oyakhilomen (2009), namely: Controls Regulates Enforces Punishes. Law is very wide and all-encompassing and that is why every profession, like every society, has its own law or form of law. The laws that affect businesses are known as business laws or company laws or law of contracts, while those that affect property are known as property laws. It therefore implies that the laws that control, regulate, enforce and punish in the operation of mass media are Media Laws. Importance of Law The importance of law is discussed below. Protection of life, national security, public safety and social welfare You can imagine a state of lawlessness, where the right of an individual is not defined and the limitation to the right in order to protect the right of another individual is not set, only those who have the will would have their way. Law protects the rights, duties of people, be it political, social, economic or cultural. Protection of life There are a number of incidents taking place all the time which could be harmful to people. This leads to the need of making law. People need a proper code of life. They need to know their rights as well as others right; only then they could lead a peaceful life. According to Sohn, law is the sum of rules, which regulates the life of the people, or creates social order and organization that are necessary for preservation of life and ordered control of the life of the community. National security and public safety National security is the protection of a state and its human and material resources against both internal and external forces. According to Elias, state security includes all the means at a government s disposal for securing or protecting the nation or state from the danger of suppression either by an external power or through internal insurrection. Compiled By: S. M. Saqib Page 3

Social welfare of state Oyakhilomen (2009) highlights the under listed as means through which laws ensure social welfare of state: I. Tax laws provide money for social facilities. II. III. IV. Traffic laws provide for orderliness on the highways. Law of contract encourages business transactions and allows them to strive. Law of misdeed protects proprietary rights and freedom of property, and commands compensation, damages or other remedies in case of trespass. V. Arbitration laws and rules of courts provide ways of setting disputes when they arise. VI. Law performs normative and social functions by pointing to direction of wrong committed by members of the public and helping or supporting state functionaries, operators and machinery of society. CONCLUSION Law is one of the key elements that shape society. The functions of laws are numerous. Law holds the society firm to save it from falling apart. It therefore implies that if there is any lapses in law, it make proportional impact in the growth and development of the society. SUMMARY From the discussion above, you should understand that law protect individuals and the state, it preserves life and property; it promotes the administration of justice, it preserves social welfare; and it brings about change and transformation. All these are tantamount to development in a society. Definition of Ethics Ethics is derived from the Greek ethos, meaning custom, usage, or character. Ethics is the liberal arts discipline that appraises voluntary human conduct in so far as it can be judged right or wrong in reference to determinative principles (Christians et al, 1998). Ethics is a set of principles of conduct governing an individual or group (Bowles and Borden, 2004). Compiled By: S. M. Saqib Page 4

Ethics is the science of rightness and wrongness of conduct. Conduct is purposive action, which involves choice and will. Neher and Sandin (2007) note that: In a technical sense, ethics is a branch of the field of philosophy, which is concerned about judgments on right and wrong actions. Beyond the discipline of philosophy, many fields include the study of and applications of ethics to their domain. Ethics refers to a systematic method for making judgments concerning voluntary actions of people. Differences between Law and Ethics Ethics is not the same as law, and ethical constraints are not the same as legal rules. Ethics articulates what we ought to do in order to be moral individuals and professionals, while law concentrates on the bottom line below which we should not fall. Ethics deals with ideal behaviors, while law deals with minimum standards. There is a common tendency today to equate ethical standards with legal standards, and for victims of unethical behavior to seek legal remedies for perceived ethical lapses. This is a false equation and a fundamental misconception of the relationship between law and ethics. Not all moral issues can be, or should be, legally collected. The law permits many immoralities that transgress against friends and enemies alike, such as breaking of promises, uttering of unkind words, and certain forms of deception. In the course of our lives we often offend the feelings of others, an act for which the law provides no compensation to the offended party. A high school student, for example, might break his date at the last minute, but the lady kept in waiting cannot resort to the courts for compensation of her tearful suffering. Nevertheless, legal obligations are based on moral ones. The criminal and civil statutes codify some of our most important moral obligations, for example, prohibitions against killing, stealing, raping, or cruelly defaming another s reputation. Most of these laws involve punishing direct harm to others, but some laws are based on moral principles that are not concerned with the wellbeing of others. Laws regulating sexual behaviour between consenting adults and prostitution fall into this category. The moral justification for such laws is not widely shared within society, and thus obedience is less certain. Nevertheless, a fundamental distinction between our legal code and moral obligations is that legal violations involve prescribed penalties and ethical indiscretions do not. Hence, ethics is the foundation for all laws but not all laws are based on ethics. Most laws are ethical but not all ethics are written in law. Violation of all legal rules can be redressed in a law court while not all ethical violations can be compensated. Compiled By: S. M. Saqib Page 5

CONCLUSION Ethics is the foundation of morality and law in every society. The culture, civilization, customs and religion of a people determine the values they will regard as ethical and the ones they will see as abominable. It is necessary, if not mandatory for every society to have a generally accepted level of ethics or standards in order to ensure stability, peace and progress. SUMMARY Ethics is a system of moral or respectable conduct that guides the actions of individuals and organizations in an organized society. Ethics is different from law as not all ethical values are enforceable by the courts but most laws have their foundation in ethical standards. Society needs to have a system of ethics to ensure stability and cohesion. Compiled By: S. M. Saqib Page 6