Canada’s meeting place for freelance writers and creators

Established 2010

The News of the World scandal is on every journalists' mind (and lips, and in their tweets, too) this week. It's turned the principles and ethics of the people who make the news into news itself: opinion pieces about journalists' dastardly deeds and extensive discussions about the media in the U.K. It's also got a lot of people outside the media industry asking: just what are journalistic standards these days?

For journalists with a regular gig, their publication will most likely have its own established guidelines and code of conduct. The Toronto Star, for example, has its Atkinson Principles, which provide an "intellectual foundation" for the paper, as well as more specific Statement of Principles, and a separate code of ethics for its photographers. The CBC also has extensive Journalism Policies on its site, and Canadian Press includes ethical guidelines in its Editorial Values. Other publications are less public about their guidelines, but most have at least something for contributors and editors to consult.

But where can freelancers turn? A number of journalism-focused non-profits and industry associations have their own standards.  For its part the Canadian Association of Journalists has a "Statement of principles and ethical guidelines" as well as guidelines for investigative journalists. Other Canadian organizations with published codes of ethics include RTDNA Canada (the Association of Electronic Journalists), CWA Canada, and CEP Canada (and, by association, the Canadian Freelance Union).

So when you're confronted with a "should I or shouldn't I?" situation in the pursuit of a story, what guides you? Is there a written set of standards you adhere to (something like the SPJ's Code of Ethics)? Do you think back to a journalism ethics course you took in J-school? Or maybe ask a mentor or a freelancer friend? Or do you just go with your gut? Tell us in the comments below.

Freelancers maintain personal blogs for all sorts of reasons: to have an all-in-one-place online portfolio, to increase their profile in a particular community or gain a reputation as an authority on a particular topic, to experiment with different types of writing than they get to do in their freelance work, or, often, to post photos of their…
[caption id="attachment_1078" align="aligncenter" width="580" caption="The Whig-Standard's homepage, in need of focus. Screenshot from May 23, 2011."][/caption]After years of newsroom cuts that they say have tarnished the image of their once-great local paper, Kingston residents and area journalists have had enough. Together with Communications…
[caption id="attachment_1047" align="aligncenter" width="580" caption="Screengrab from Rue Frontenac's front page, May 19, 2011."][/caption] Rue Frontenac launched in winter 2009 as website for locked-out workers at the Journal de Montreal, offering union information on the conflict between the paper and its unionized workers that began in…
For better or worse, the ongoing series of "Robertson v. _____" cases continues. On May 2, a final decision was handed down in the case of "Robertson v. Proquest, Cedrom, Toronto Star Newspapers, Rogers and Canwest." (This decision comes after a tentative settlement reached this January.) Heather Robertson and Kirk Baert of the firm Koskie Minsky…
Yesterday, some unsuspecting late-afternoon channel surfers were likely puzzled by the sudden appearance of the Sun News Network on their screens. It sprang into action at 5 p.m. (after a half-hour preview), just in time to greet 9-to-5ers, still angry from their long commutes home and primed for the pundits' right-leaning rants.The long-term…
[caption id="attachment_622" align="alignnone" width="460" caption="Graphic from the Guild Freelancers of the California Media Workers Guild, posted on the Newspaper Guild's "][/caption]Open letters to publications' management are a last-ditch tactic to right wrongs and spur change—but as we've seen recently, they can be effective.Now, adding…
If you missed it yesterday, familiarize yourself with Nino Ricci's open letter to the Globe before reading on.We asked Derek Finkle, founder of the Canadian Writers Group, which represents independent writers, about typical compensation for freelance travel writing and whether it's common for dailies to leave an invoice unpaid for six months, as…
In an open letter to the Globe posted on his own site, author Nino Ricci feigns concern for the paper's financial situation while castigating them for failing to pay him for a travel story published six months ago.Ricci, award-winning novelist and former president of PEN Canada, states in his letter that after the paper let him charge travel…
Poynter.org has posted a press release from the Newspaper Guild-CWA in which it asks writers who contribute work to the Huffington Post for free to cease doing so until the company agrees to start compensating them.The Guild's request follows the Huffington's Post's recent $350 million buyout by AOL, and it's not the first call for change. They are…

Page 42 of 43

First 40 41 42 43