Unpublishing the News: An Analysis of U.S. and South Korean Journalists’ Discourse About an Emerging Practice

Authors

  • Hye Soo Nah University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • Stephanie Craft University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Keywords:

journalistic routines, ethics, privacy, corrections, autonomy, comparative research

Abstract

One axiom of the digital age is that online is forever. Such imperishability of information has led an increasing number of news subjects and sources to request that stories containing outdated or negative personal information be “unpublished.” These requests confront news practices and ethical guidelines related to privacy, accuracy, harm, and autonomy, which complicates newsroom responses. U.S. and South Korean journalists’ discourses about unpublishing demonstrate that those in a more individualistic culture (U.S.) highlight obligations related to accuracy and autonomy, while those in a more collectivistic culture (South Korea) highlight obligations related to individual privacy and avoidance of harm.

Author Biographies

Hye Soo Nah, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Ph.D. StudentInstitute of Comminications ResearchPhone: 217-419-8331

Stephanie Craft, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Professor and HeadDepartment of JournalismFaculty, Institute of Communications ResearchFaculty affiliate, Cline Center for Advanced Social Research 

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Published

2019-06-14

Issue

Section

Articles