FEATURE ARTICLE
Practicing compassion in an unbiased journalism
by Kyle Harland June 16, 2008
In
the 1880s, Joseph Pulitzer hung a sign in the newsroom of
his paper, the New York World, which read: “The
World has no friends.”
It is an historic example of journalistic
independence, a value that became intrinsic to the field and
is still a highly regarded principle among journalists. It
is a notion that goes hand in hand with objectivity –
a word that, for better or for worse, was chained to journalism
for much of the 20th century. Objectivity, in its traditional
sense, is the ideal that journalists are unbiased, keeping
their values and beliefs out of their work. These goals of
independence and objectivity left little room for compassion.
But in today’s changing media environment, the principle
of compassion is gaining credibility.
JOSEPH PULITZER
“The World
has no friends” gives the impression of detachment,
perhaps even disconnect from community. These are disconcerting
qualities for a craft that is built on a trusting relationship
with its audience. Despite this, these concerns have just
begun to be addressed seriously in journalism. This is because,
for those who subscribed to traditional objectivity, compassion
was simply not possible. Acknowledging emotions and allowing
those emotions into a story was not compatible with objectivity.
But this view of traditional objectivity
in journalism is outdated. The idea that journalists can truly
be “objective,” completely disregarding their
own ideas, beliefs, and experience, has largely been rejected.
The legacy of objectivity and independence that made it difficult
for journalism to usher in new traditions, such as compassion,
is changing as journalists abandon such black and white ideals.
“I don’t think that having a
compassionate outlook is in any way at odds with doing one’s
job as serving the public interest,” says Romayne Smith
Fullerton, a professor of information and media studies at
the University of Western Ontario. “I think not to have
compassion might, in fact, undermine your ability to do your
job as a servant of the public interest.”
A major reason for this is that the journalist’s
ability to understand and connect with people is essential
for learning about stories, and compassion allows journalists
to do this more fully. In our current media environment that
so often deals with victims of tragedy, a sense of compassion
undoubtedly plays a part in journalists’ ability to
understand people in the news.
Empathy as a tool
Patrick Lee Plaisance, a professor of journalism
and technical communication at Colorado State University,
believes empathy is an important tool for journalists.
“I’m a good journalist when
I can empathize, when I can truly grasp the predicament of
my subjects. And if I’m blind to that, then I’m
failing in some way as a journalist,” he says. “It’s
critical for journalists never to lose sight of their own
humanity and that means understanding and empathizing and
connecting on a human level, not just as instruments of stories.”
Plaisance is clear that this must be done
within the context of broader journalistic goals such as telling
the audience a relevant story in an unbiased, informative
manner. But he says, “If I’m clear on my professional
duty to a broader community, a broader audience, then I’m
hoping that compassion is appropriate and I’m not too
lacking and I don’t become sympathetic, rather than
empathetic.”
Though the difference between sympathy and
empathy may seem trivial, there is an important distinction
that the journalist must make between them. To be sympathetic
means to feel remorse for someone’s situation. It is
dangerous territory for a journalist because, in sharing suffering,
one’s own motives might become affected. But empathy
is the understanding and recognition of another’s feelings.
This allows the journalist to be more connected and perceptive.
However, being an empathetic journalist
can be challenging. A real sense of empathy requires understanding
the spectrum of ideas, events, and communities related to
a story. Regardless of a reporter’s intelligence or
skill, if they are thrust into a situation and have had a
short time to conduct background research, they cannot be
expected to be as empathetic as someone familiar with a particular
community or situation.
Fred Brown, a former president of the Society
of Professional Journalists and currently the vice chair on
its ethics committee, has noticed a decline in the connections
journalists have with their communities. “One of the
things that disappeared over the years is there are a lot
of beats that no longer exist, and so reporters tend not to
see the same people day after day.” This not only puts
them at a disadvantage in terms of information, but also doesn’t
allow them to approach the stories and characters with the
same sense of compassion.
Fullerton agrees that beat reporters have
an advantage. “I think we need to do a better job of
reporting things in broader contexts, more detail, less reporting
necessarily in times of crisis, trying at times of peace as
well, or quietness, to open up lines of communication between
and amongst communities so that journalism generally can foster
better understanding all of the time.”
This is different from the oft-used technique
where a reporter briefly tells a story of crisis and never
revisits the issue. Focusing on a broader perspective can
ultimately lead to a more informed and compelling narrative
for the audience.
“The whole mission,” says Plaisance
of journalism, “is to, as accurately as possible, inform
and reflect the community that it serves. And compassion’s
role is to help establish a connection that is required to
perform that service.”
Compassion in the hierarchy of journalistic
values
While compassion should perhaps become more
prevalent in journalism, it cannot be at its core of values.
If it were, journalism’s purpose would be defeated.
Important information that the public should know would often
not be exposed for fear of harming someone. To this end, Brown
says that though compassion is important, accuracy and truth
telling are paramount.
The idea of “minimizing harm,”
a value put forth in many journalism ethics codes, is subordinate
to these. “You can’t be too compassionate. You
can’t ignore stories just because it’s going to
hurt somebody. Every story, or most stories, have some harmful
effects on somebody simply because that’s the nature
of news.”
Compassion must also be an informed emotion.
It serves little journalistic purpose if it is not linked
to relevant information. “Intellect and emotion are
connected. You engage one without engaging the other at great
peril,” says Lee Wilkins, a professor of journalism
at the University of Missouri. Eliciting compassion through
a photograph of a starving African child, for example, is
not conducive to the goals of journalism. If a journalist
wants to evoke compassion from such a story, it should be
done in the context of facts such as why the child is starving,
if there has been an ongoing problem, and how the problem
can be resolved. Evoking compassion in the audience without
this context can leave the audience feeling helpless.
Compassion also inherently biases stories
to a more local, relational level because that is where compassion
is felt most for both journalists and audiences. Compassion
is more prevalent on smaller scales with homogeneous audiences.
“It does get trickier to do, the bigger your community
gets,” says Fullerton.
Both these issues of becoming too compassionate
or getting “too close” to a story, as well as
instilling a local community bias, threaten journalistic independence.
This is why many journalists are uncomfortable about the idea
of compassion. So while it may be an important value, if pursued
blindly and without regard for other news values, it can eclipse
the broader goals of journalism. “Journalism is not
a popularity contest and when people assume that it is –
that journalism is done to make audiences feel good –
that’s a problem,” says Plaisance. “Journalists
don’t need their sources or their audience to be their
friends,” echoes Fullerton.
Negative image
While journalists might not need to make
friends as Pulitzer held in the 1880s, their public image
is important. Journalism is responsible to the public, while
the public is asked to trust, and hopefully respect, journalists
and the institution of journalism.
But the public’s image of journalism
is not healthy. A study from the Pew Research Center for the
People and the Press found that 32% of people surveyed thought
news organizations were immoral. “If I were to go outside
the school of journalism and bump into somebody, what they’d
tell me is that journalists will do anything to get a story,
that all we care about is making a buck,” says Wilkins.
Brown believes part of this image is because
when journalists are in public, they are not often in a position
to display their best “manners.” They can be seen
as belligerent, stubborn, disrespectful – and certainly
not compassionate. But this is because often when they are
in the public eye, they are interacting with officials, press
agents, and celebrities that require such actions. Dealing
with people in such roles doesn’t require as much compassion.
Part of exercising compassion professionally
for journalists is to be aware that different subjects need
to be treated with different levels of compassion. “The
big distinction is between those who seek attention, and those
who get attention simply because of what’s happened
to them,” says Brown. Unfortunately for journalism’s
public image, it is often the group of people that requires
a lesser extent of compassion that journalists interact with
in the public eye.
The other group is those who are vulnerable
or who do not seek attention. Children, the elderly, victims
of tragedies, and people who are not fully aware of the workings
of media should be afforded more compassion than those who
seek the spotlight. But the public does not often see how
journalists treat these people. To exercise compassion when
dealing with those who are vulnerable often means conducting
an interview in a private setting as opposed accosting the
victim in public or even at a scene of an accident or crime.
It is often when journalists are not seen by the public that
they are most likely to be acting compassionately.
While a greater sense of compassion within
journalism may be helpful, the public’s image of immorality
may be excessive. “I’m always struggling with
what I think is a very tragic disconnect between what journalists
do and what the public think journalists do. It’s a
pretty wide gulf,” says Plaisance.
A Changing Value
One way to dispel this negative public image
and alert the audience to journalism’s use of compassion
is through transparency. Fortunately, the Internet has allowed
an opportunity for a massive increase in journalistic transparency.
Emails, blogs, feedback, comments, and other easy forms of
communication can create a connection with readers that allows
them to see when journalists are compassionate, to whom, and
why.
For Fullerton, compassion is a great tool
for showing the audience that “there are things at stake
here that we need to care about.” But despite its efficacy
in journalism, compassion is not a newsroom staple. Fullerton
explains that this is because, “By and large, it’s
hard to draw a line. It’s one of those extremely gray
areas that no one feels completely comfortable about so we
just sweep under the rug.”
Fortunately, compassion is a value that
need not be taught. As a human emotion, compassion is something
that everyone identifies with – including journalists.
But some journalists have been taught to ignore compassion
in the interests of traditional objectives. Now, many journalism
critics agree that there must be a balance between being compassionate
and employing such news values. When this is achieved and
balance is used in a professional manner, it is useful.
Compassion can establish valuable connections
with sources that can help journalists get beneath the surface
of a story. It can aid in relating stories to the audience,
and triggering an informed emotional response that encourages
civic engagement. And while journalists need not make friends
as Pulitzer thought, a mix of compassion with other established
journalism values may go a long way in putting a human face
on journalism. It may convince audiences that journalism is
not immoral, rather, it is a noble craft connected to the
people it serves.