journalistic blastema - Übersetzung nach Englisch
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journalistic blastema - Übersetzung nach Englisch

SUBSET OF MEDIA ETHICS DEALING WITH PRINCIPLES OF ETHICS AND GOOD PRACTICE APPLICABLE TO JOURNALISTS
Journalistic ethics; Journalism ethics; Media accountability; Media responsibility; Media responsability; Ethics in journalism; Journalistic integrity; Protecting sources; Journalism standards; Journalistic professionalism; Journalistic standards; Journalistic standards and ethics; Journalism standards and ethics; Journalistic ethics and standards; Journalistic responsibility; Ethics of journalism; Ethical Journalism; Ethical journalism; Journalistic impropriety; Good journalistic practice

journalistic blastema      
(n.) = blastema periodístico
Ex: In order to deal with the ever increasing mass of biomedical information ("journalistic blastoma"), IAIMS has extolled the use of quality filters, to sift the good from the bad.
blastema         
  • Here is an example mechanism of what happens during [[neoblast]] specification during regeneration.
MASS OF CELLS CAPABLE OF ENACTING GROWTH AND REGENERATION
----
* journalistic blastema = blastema periodístico
journalistic         
  • pmc=5427995}}</ref>
  • Journalist interviewing a [[cosplay]]er
  • Media greeting Cap Anamur II's Rupert Neudeck in Hamburg, 1986 at a [[press conference]]
  • Journalists at a [[press conference]]
  • News photographers and reporters waiting behind a police line in [[New York City]], in May 1994
  • Photojournalists photographing US President Barack Obama in November 2013
  • building collapse]] in [[Dar es Salaam]], [[Tanzania]]. March 2013.
  • imprisonment of their colleagues]] on [[Human Rights Day]], 10 December 2016
  • [[Walter Lippmann]] in 1914
INVESTIGATION AND REPORTING OF EVENTS, ISSUES AND TRENDS TO A BROAD AUDIENCE
Print journalism; Reportage; Rural Journalism; Professional journalism; Journalistic; Newspaper executive; Lippmann-Dewey debate; Reportages; Journalism on social media; History of Indian journalism
(adj.) = periodístico
Ex: For this type of publishing the author is simply a person with journalistic narrative skills who can produce a reasonably accurate and interesting account at very high speed.
----
* journalistic blastema = blastema periodístico

Definition

Blastema
·noun The structureless, protoplasmic tissue of the embryo; the primitive basis of an organ yet unformed, from which it grows.

Wikipedia

Journalism ethics and standards

Journalistic ethics and standards comprise principles of ethics and good practice applicable to journalists. This subset of media ethics is known as journalism's professional "code of ethics" and the "canons of journalism". The basic codes and canons commonly appear in statements by professional journalism associations and individual print, broadcast, and online news organizations.

There are around 400 codes covering journalistic work around the world. While various codes may differ in the detail of their content and come from different cultural traditions, most share common elements including the principles of truthfulness, accuracy and fact-based communications, independence, objectivity, impartiality, fairness, respect for others and public accountability, as these apply to the gathering, editing and dissemination of newsworthy information to the public.

Like many broader ethical systems, the ethics of journalism include the principle of "limitation of harm". This may involve enhanced respect for vulnerable groups and the withholding of certain details from reports, such as the names of minor children, crime victims' names, or information not materially related to the news report where the release of such information might, for example, harm someone's reputation or put them at undue risk. There has also been discussion and debate within the journalism community regarding appropriate reporting of suicide and mental health, particularly with regard to verbiage.

Some journalistic codes of ethics, notably some European codes, also include a concern with discriminatory references in news based on race, religion, sexual orientation, and physical or mental disabilities. The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe approved (in 1993) Resolution 1003 on the Ethics of Journalism, which recommends that journalists respect the presumption of innocence, in particular in cases that are still sub judice.