Abstract
This chapter explores ethical issues intrinsic to the practice of visual journalism in the global sphere. As both a practical and theoretical exploration, the chapter focuses on visual ethics as a dynamic continuum of seeing as a way of knowing and making meaning. Through examples, the chapter demonstrates that visual journalism is an active process guided by conscious and nonconscious perceiving, interpreting, documenting, and distributing observed moments, people, and places. The chapter reviews visual codes of ethics, applicable media ethics theories, and visual ethics literature and summarizes core issues key to the ethical practice of visual journalism. Characteristics epitomizing ethical visual journalists are courage, clarity, and compassion. The chapter asserts that visual journalism is not only a matter of ethics with potential individual and global impact but also a matter of survival, in that visual journalism at its core is about helping humans understand themselves, other beings of the earth, and the world around them.