Abstract

Ethical failures are not just philosophical problems, but also economic problems that hold significant social and political consequences for the social and communal contexts in which these are enacted. Recent ethical scandals such as Bell Pottinger and Cambridge Analytica have reawakened public debate on ethical standards in professional practice. While some research on PR roles has been conducted in the South African context since 2002, there are no formally documented studies regarding the moral philosophy and ethics of PR practice in South Africa. This article seeks to determine how South African PR practitioners respond to their ethical obligations. Research findings confirm that partisan values still dominate and that contexts of practice do not facilitate ethical practice by meeting ethical obligations through ethics of care and communality. The findings seem to indicate that the roots of ethical failures in the industry run deep. South African PR practice will continue to be regarded as a “dark art” unless it can free itself of moral constraints inherent to the reflexive modernist PR practices and assumptions that prevail. To facilitate a transition away from compliance to codes of conduct towards greater moral accountability, moral character in role enactment must be engaged with on a more profound level.

Highlights

  • The world, and business in particular, seems to be in great need of ethical reconsideration and moral regeneration

  • ♦♦ How do South African public relations practitioners respond to the ethical dilemmas they face in their practice?

  • Despite this high level of awareness and knowledge of the concepts that underlie ethical PR practice, client systems still tend to dominate the process of ethical decision-making

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The world, and business in particular, seems to be in great need of ethical reconsideration and moral regeneration. As highlighted by Fiordi (2012), “the erosion of moral standards appears to be deepening” and these ethical failures are not just philosophical problems, and economic problems that spill over into the social realm where these decisions are enacted. Ethical business failures are not Verwey & Muir enacted in financial and economic contexts, and hold significant social and political consequences for social and communal contexts. Facebook has had to apologise publicly for the emergent Cambridge Analytica privacy scandal that is embroiling the network in a legal and regulatory nightmare. It involves the collection of personally identifiable data of up to 87 million Facebook users, which was allegedly used to covertly influence voter opinion on behalf of political clients (BBC 2018)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call