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Sources and Synergies: News Media Discussion of Public Relations and Ethics
Bonnie Parnell Riechert, Ph.D., APR Assistant Professor School of Advertising and Public Relations College of Communication and Information The University of Tennessee 476 Communications Building Knoxville, TN USA 37996-0343 (865) 974-5108 [log in to unmask]
For presentation at the annual convention of Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, San Antonio, Texas, August 2005 Sources and Synergies: News Media Discussion of Public Relations and Ethics
Abstract: News media discussion of public relations and ethics is investigated in a computer-assisted content analysis of articles mentioning both "public relations" and "ethics" in The New York Times from 1988-2004. Themes in coverage are identified. The Public Relations Society of America and its code of ethics are represented in the coverage, indicating some success in frame sponsorship. The phrase "public relations" is used in a variety of ways; implications for practitioners and educators are discussed.
Sources and Synergies: News Media Discussion of Public Relations and Ethics
Introduction Public relations practitioners and educators who seek to advance the professional status of public relations are concerned with ethical standards. After all, the criteria of any profession include specialized education, a body of knowledge, provision of a valued service to society, emphasis on public service and social responsibility, and adherence to some "code of ethics and standards of performance though self-governing associations of colleagues" (Cutlip, Center & Broom, 2000, p. 51). Though public relations does not enjoy general acceptance as a profession, many individuals practicing public relations "qualify as professionals, on the basis of their commitment to meeting professional standards" (Cutlip, Center & Broom, 2000, p. 52). Public relations practitioners and educators may advance professionalism individually and collectively through professional associations. Professional associations provide mechanisms for continued education as well as establishment and promotion of ethical standards of practice. This exploratory study proceeds from a media agenda-building perspective to examine how the news media have discussed publications and ethics, with particular attention to how the media have covered the leading public relations association and its long-standing code of ethics. Computer-assisted quantitative content analysis and qualitative analyses will examine the content of news media on these topics, addressing such issues as what themes are present, who frames this discussion, and how news values and other influences on content appear to operate. News content may be viewed as the product of meaning negotiation by journalists, editors, and sources that they interview and quote in the new articles. In this way, influential news content is synergistic. Literature Review and Background Agenda-Setting and Framing If advancement of ethical standards is important to public relations professionals, then news media discussion of public relations and ethics is equally relevant. This is due to the power of the mass media to influence popular thinking. As Cohen noted in his now "famous dictum about media effects" (McCombs & Ghanem, 2001, p. 69) the mass media are "stunningly successful" in telling us "what to think about" (1963, p. 13). The media agenda shapes, or helps shape, the public agenda. McCombs and Shaw referred to this as the "agenda-setting function of mass media" (1972). Since their widely-cited study, mass media scholars have given much attention to this function in media effects research. A number of scholars are shifting focus from media effects to media content, realizing that if the mass media can tell us what to think abut, it is important to understand what influences the content of the news media. "A number of researchers who previously studied media effects—including ourselves—now find themselves asking why such effect-producing content exists to begin with" (Shoemaker and Reese, 1996, p. 5). Gans (1979) and Gitlin (1980) suggested content research can be organized into a handful of categories including influence by media workers' socialization and attitudes, media routines, other social institution and forces, and ideology of those in power. For five decades communication scholars have examined influences on media content by media workers, their employers, organizational structure, and society itself. Yet "there has been little attention paid to the theoretical links between them" (Shoemaker & Reese,1996, p. 5). Shoemaker and Reese (1991, 1996) call for development of a comprehensive theory of media content. They offer a hierarchical model of influences on media content representing five levels: (1) the individual (journalist) level, (2) the media routines level, (3), the organization level, (4) the extramedia level, and (5) the ideological level. The model is depicted by a series of five concentric circles representing the individual (journalist) level in the smallest, center circle and the ideological level in the largest circle. This is a useful way of categorizing and investigating influences on media content. News values--such as timeliness, prominence, and conflict represent--content influences at the media routines level. Content influences at the extramedia level include sources of information, other social institutions (business and government, for example), the economic environment, and technology. Media-targeted efforts by public relations practitioners and specific interest groups would be examples of content influences at the extramedia level. Shoemaker and Reese call for more study of "the message itself as a dependent variable. We argue that the message, or media content, is influenced by a wide variety of factors both inside and outside media organizations" (1996, p. 11). As Kennamer (1992, 1994) noted, "The news media are as much the target of agenda-setting as they are the source" (p. 9). Berkowitz (1992,1994) gives a compelling argument that media agenda-building is the preferred terminology for the concept of how the media agenda is formed. The concept "does not focus on agenda transferal as much as it does on agenda creation . . ." (p. 87). As Dearing and Rogers have noted, "the position on the media agenda importantly determines that issue's salience on the public agenda" (1996, p. 92). Of 112 empirical studies of the agenda-setting process reviewed by them, 60 percent supported a media agenda-public agenda relationship. Who frames the coverage of public relations and ethics in the news media? And how do the news media report on this topic? Communication scholars have studied framing in news media coverage since Goffman (1974) and Bateson (1972) suggested the importance of how we organize experience and Tuchman (1978) applied a framing perspective to analysis of news production. Framing is considered the selective representation of something, concerned with what is included, excluded, and emphasized (Hallahan, 1999). The framing metaphor may be "understood as a window or portrait frame drawn around information that delimits the subject matter and, thus, focuses on key elements within" (Hallahan, 1999, p. 207). Entman argued that framing "essentially involves selection and salience. To frame is to select some aspects of perceived reality and make them more salient in the communicating text, in such a way as to promote a particular problem definition, causal interpretation, moral evaluation and/or treatment recommendation" (Entman, 1993, p. 55). The selective nature of framing makes it a "critical activity in the construction of social reality because it helps shape the perspectives through which people see the world" (Hallahan, 1999, p. 207). Hallahan (1999) noted the importance of framing in public relations: Implicitly, framing plays an integral role in public relations. If public relations is defined as the process of establishing and maintaining mutually beneficial relations between an organization and publics on whom it depends (Cutlip, Center, & Broom, 1995), the establishment of common frames of reference about topics or issues of mutual concern is a necessary condition for effective relations to be established" (p. 207).
News framing studies over more than two decades have examined media coverage of a variety of issues, "although the role of public relations as sources in news framing has been largely overlooked" (Hallahan, 1999, p. 221). One aspect of studying framing of news involves frame sponsorship (Gamson & Modigliani, 1989, Hallahan, 1999) or what Scheufele (1999) called frame building. This involves the success of competing stakeholders to define issues and ultimately influence public opinion, the media agenda, and the policy agenda. The concept of frame sponsorship suggests the question, who frames the news? Or, to whose views do the media give voice? Entman argued that frames within text are manifest by the presence or absence of key words (Entman, 1993). Framing scholars have noted the need for more precise methods for studying frames in text, and computer-assisted content analysis methods have provided one means for doing this. Public Relations Society of America With a membership of 20,000 (or 28,000 if members of the student society also are counted) the Public Relations Society of America (PRSA) is "the world's largest organization for public relations professionals" (www.prsa.org). The society is headquartered in New York City. It is considered the leading association in the public relations industry (Fitzpatrick, 1996). The evolution of the society's code of ethics is more than five decades in duration and impressive in its scope. PRSA was established in 1947 with the merger of the West Coast American Council on Public Relations and the East Coast National Association of Public Relations Counsel (www.prsa.org). Some textbooks list the founding date as 1948. Discussion on developing a guiding code must have begun immediately, for the organization adopted its first "Professional Standards for the Practice of Public Relations" on Dec. 4, 1950, not long after its establishment. The first code included five principles. Since then, the society revised its code seven times "to keep pace with industry practices and increased expectations for ethical performances" (Fitzpatrick, 2002a, 89). The current code was adopted in 2000 to "heighten awareness of ethical issues and address concerns regarding code enforcement" (Fitzpatrick, 2002a, 89). Fitzpatrick (2002a) traces the evolution of the PRSA code of ethics, discussing the text of each generation and the revisions that occurred in 1954, 1959, 1963, 1977, 1983, 1988, and finally 2000. These historical changes are summarized in Table 1. In the first revision on Oct. 15-16, 1954, PRSA approved a shorter revised code that included six principles and "read more like a pledge than its predecessor" (Fitzpatrick, 2002a, 91). At the time, society membership totaled 1,139. Enforcement was emphasized in the 1959 code revision that included four principles and 16 articles. The 1959 code included four "shalls" and nine "shall nots." Under the code, members who had evidence of other members' conduct of "unethical, illegal, or unfair practices" were to report this to the society. PRSA bylaws were amended to establish a national judicial council to consider such cases. A nine-member grievance board was established in 1962. The board was renamed in 1983 to the Board of Ethics and Professional Standards (Fitzpatrick, 2002a, 96). A 1963 code revision strengthened "the prohibition on conflicts of interest" and addressed "growing concerns about the use of front groups" (Fitzpatrick, 2002a, 96). Several changes were included in the 1977 code revision when PRSA membership stood at 8,337. Among the revisions was the removal of sexist language. Paragraphs that were criticized by the FTC as restraining competition and price fixing were removed. A new provision barred members from guaranteeing achievement of results beyond their immediate control. And references to "the importance of constitutional and human rights" were added (Fitzpatrick, 2002a, 98). Revisions in 1983 clarified language and format. In 1988 revisions included several noteworthy additions such as obligations of members to both the client or employer and the democratic process. The first of 17 articles stated, "A member shall conduct his or her professional life in accord with the public interest." Official interpretations were written to explain the intent of articles such as, "A member shall not engage in any practice which has the purpose of corrupting the integrity of channels of communication or the processes of government." Over time, the PRSA enforcement system was criticized for being ineffective. The PRSA Grievance Board had no jurisdiction over nonmembers of the society, for one thing. Members were critical of code enforcement yet reluctant to get involved. A strategic plan for PRSA introduced in 1993 called for PRSA to become "the standard bearer or ethical business practice" by 2000 (Warner, 1993, 2-3). An Ethic Summit was held in 1999 with the PRSA Board of Directors meeting with members of the Ethics Board. The board approved development of a new code. After much thoughtful development, PRSA adopted the new 2000 Member Code of Ethics on Oct. 21, 2000, at its annual meeting. Notably, the new code "was designed to be aspirational and educational, such that provisions were replaced with positive, affirmation obligations." The code "emphasized the need for 'responsible advocacy,' stressing loyalty to clients and employers" and also emphasizing "the importance of professional competence" (Fitzpatrick, 2002a, 109). The new code includes six values (advocacy, honesty, expertise, independence, loyalty, and fairness) and six code provisions dealing with free flow of information, competition, disclosure of information, safeguarding confidences, conflicts of interest, and enhancing the profession (www.prsa.org). As the new code was approved and adopted, the association urged the selection of an ethics officer (a liaison/resource person) in each local chapter. A six-step decision-making guide was widely published. Research Questions Based on the media agenda-building and framing perspectives outlined above, and given that professional public relations practitioners and educators are interested in ethics, the following research questions are posed: RQ 1: What can we learn about news media discussion of public relations and ethics – with particular attention to discussion related to the leading association in public relations, the Public Relations Society of America, and its code of ethics?
RQ 2: What can this tell us about influences on news media content?
An alternative way to ask Research Question 1 would be, how do the news media frame discussion about public relations and ethics? In addressing this question, trends in media coverage can be explored to determine whether coverage increased, decreased, or stayed relatively the same over time. Coverage can be examined for identification of most prominent themes, as well as for explicit (unattributed to sources) messages about public relations and for evidence of effective frame sponsorship by PRSA. Methods and Results This study employed computer-assisted quantitative content analysis of a sizable set of news media articles, as well as qualitative, case study content analysis of a small subset of the articles, to address the Research Questions posed above. The New York Times was selected for the analysis because it is a widely-read newspaper and is considered a leader in setting the media agenda for national issues. The paper has circulation of more than 1.1 million on weekdays and 1.7 million on Sundays, the highest circulation of any seven-day newspaper. According to Dearing and Rogers, "When the Times considers an issue newsworthy, other U.S. media are influenced to follow suit" (1996, p. 20). The New York Times "is generally regarded as the most respected U.S. news medium" (Dearing and Rogers, 1996, p. 32). The methods and results of the analysis are discussed here. Full-text articles about public relations and ethics in The New York Times were obtained from the Dialog database. The search strategy specified articles that mentioned "public relations" (or "pr") and "ethics." (The command asked for "public," within one word of "relations," or "pr," and "ethic?", which would include "ethic," "ethics," "ethical," and "ethically.") The time period 1988-2004 was selected in order to examine content and changes in coverage over a 17-year period that includes two revisions of the PRSA Code of Ethics. The search procedure yielded an initial set of 626 articles mentioning "public relations" or "pr" and "ethics." The set of articles included news articles, a few letters to the editor, a handful of obituaries, and several weddings (held at a local ethical society and involving people with "public relations" in their job title). Wedding articles were removed. Letters to the editor included at least one from a national leader in the Public Relations Society of America; these were retained in the data set. The handful of obituary articles also were retained and included a death notice about Rex Harlow who died at age 100 in 1993 and who helped establish the Public Relations Society of America in the late 1940s. The remaining 618 articles formed the data set used in the subsequent analysis. Articles in the data set were coded by year of publication, and frequencies were compared by year. The frequency of articles by year ranged from 25 in 1999 to 47 in 1994. Table 2 shows the frequency distribution of the 618 articles by year. The frequency distribution indicates neither a dramatic increase nor decrease over the past 17 years. Themes Computer-assisted content analysis was employed to assess themes represented in this text and to explore the content of the media coverage. The computer program VBPro, developed by M. Mark Miller for analysis of verbatim text and available at no charge on the World Wide Web (mmmiller.com/vbpro/vbpro.html), was used for the analysis. Text preparation for the analysis included collecting all the articles into a single electronic file, adding a case identification number to each article, and bracketing off (in order to exclude from analysis) extraneous heading material and captions. The alphabetizing and ranking procedures of the VBPro program were used to create precise reports on all words in the data set, listed both alphabetically and by frequency, with frequency specified in both reports. The VBPro alphabetizing procedures yielded an 860-page document listing all the nearly 40,000 words used in the data set, in alphabetical order from "Aaron" (5 occurrences) to "Zywotow," a last name (3 occurrences). This is a convenient reference when the frequency of particular words are of interest. The program's ranking procedures yielded another large text file listing all the words in the data set in order of frequency of occurrence. This is a quick way to ascertain at-a-glance which words occur most often in the large volume of text. The first several pages of the frequency file were studied for substantive (that is, meaningful) words of interest that occurred most frequently (articles such as "a" and "the" occur frequently, but are not of interest in analyses such as this). Themes are manifest by the frequent occurrence of related terms. Seven prominent themes identified in this way are listed in Table 3. In order of prominence, these are referred to as Business, National Government, Medical Research, Media, Legal, Issues, and Financial. Each theme is represented by the frequent occurrence of related words in the text. The individual terms and their frequencies are also listed in the table. The "business" theme is represented by the terms company, business, companies, industry, corporate, employees, community, corporation, manager, workers, leaders, managers, organizations, leadership, marketing, customers, reputation, consumers, and consumer. These terms appear a total of 7,129 times in the text. The "national government" theme is represented by the terms president, political, campaign, government, national, federal, and administration, in a total of 5,052 occurrences. The "medical research" theme is represented by the terms university, school, research, health, students, medical, professor, college, educational, treatment, scientists, and experiments, in a total of 4,015 occurrences. The "media" theme is represented by the terms press, information, report, television, advertising, media, reporters, editor, reports, published, newspaper, reporter, journalists, reported, and journalism, in a total of 3,412 occurrences. The "legal" theme is represented by the terms law, lawyers, court, attorney, justice, action, crime, moral, prosecutors, documents, and laws, in a total of 2,920 occurrences. The "issues" theme is represented by the terms issues, issue, problems, investigation, charges, critics, scandal, and trouble, in a total of 2,469 occurrences. The "financial" theme is represented by the terms money, financial, fund, investment, funds, investors, spending, and securities, in a total of 2,144 occurrences. Miller and Riechert (2001) describe multidimensional scaling analysis and hierarchical cluster analysis methods for theme and frame identification, but these methods were not employed due to ambiguities determined in the text, as described in subsequent sections. Explicit Statements To examine what kinds of explicit messages about public relations are contained in these news articles, tagging search files for the terms "public relations" and "ethics" were created and submitted to the VBPro search procedures. The resulting reports list, by case (news article), each sentence in the data set that included the specified terms and note the terms with arrows on either side. The report files were opened and studied. The sentences can be easily isolated and perused since the VBPro tagging search function can produce a document containing only these sentences (along with the case numbers and the search summary). This capability of computer-assisted content analysis can been compared to finding "a few needles in very large haystacks" (Stevenson, 2001, p. 5). Documents produced in this way may be studied for such things as sources quoted and explicit statements, both unattributed and attributed. The computer-assisted search procedures identified 862 occurrences of "public relations" in 839 sentences and 1,143 occurrences of "ethic*" ("ethics," "ethical," "ethically," "unethical," or "unethically") in 1,888 sentences within the 50,000 sentences in the data set. The sentences were tagged and copied into separate text files that are convenient to read. The 91-page report isolating the sentences mentioning "public relations" was studied. This review suggested a very small number of examples where content influence at the individual (journalist) level appears blatantly apparent: It has the qualities of classic public relations and litigation—avoidance statements, the passive voice, the action plans, the factual quibbling and the distinctly conditional acceptance of responsibility (from a 2002 article).
Arguments sound much better when made by groups with no financial stake in an issue, public relations people have found. . . . While public relations may serve some legitimate informational purposes, is prizes deceptiveness, too (from a 1994 article). An unexpected finding—to this naive author, at least—was the fact that a large number of the articles mentioning "public relations" and "ethics" were not centrally focused on public relations. Rather, many articles in this data set mentioned "public relations"—in attributed and unattributed statements—marginally and only once. Ambiguities Finally, analysis was narrowed from sentences to mere mentions of the phrase "public relations"—looking at how the phrase was used within sentences. A review of the tagged search report described above suggested the phrase was used in dramatically different ways in this set of text. The most obvious way was in reference to public relations itself, the phrase used as a collective noun. An example from an article in 2004 would be, "What we see with the guilty verdict in the Martha Stewart trial is that the worst possible public relations a business can have is getting caught in unethical conduct." In this text, out of more than 800 occurrences of "public relations," more than 200 occurrences are as nouns. The remaining 600+ occurrences are as modifiers to a number of terms, many of which refer to public relations organizations and their activities and personnel. Multiple references were found to public relations firm, business, department, outfit, subsidiary, and so on. People are referred to as public relations numerous references to public relations consultant, adviser, specialist, vice president, expert, representative, man, woman, people, professional, team, official, practitioners, executive, manager, giant, guru, bigwig, writer, folk, handler, and so on. References also are found to public relations budgets, strategy, campaign, programs, profession, and so on. These kinds of references would be expected. However, many times "public relations" occurred as a modifier preceding a variety of quite diverse terms including nightmare, wars, setback, coup, debacle, battle, triumph, misstep, backlash, firestorm, blitz, boondoggle, exercise, bounce, disaster, games, offensive, counteroffensive, gimmick, problems, fiasco, reasons, overhaul, blather, mode, dilemma, snafu, gaffe, extravaganza, black eye, stunt, flack, big wig, giant, smoke, strike, gesture, paradise, and honeymoon. These instances serve as convincing reminders that for many journalists and others, the popular meaning of public relations is something less than ones used by professional public relations practitioners and educators. For example, a widely-accepted definition in the body of knowledge describes public relations as "the management function that establishes and maintains mutually beneficial relationships between an organization and the publics on whom its success or failure depends" (Cutlip, Center, & Broom, 2000, p. 6). Dozier, Grunig, and Grunig refer to this as a "popular definition of public relations and communication management" (1995, p. 71). This definition is favored because it encompasses an organization's ethical actions (what it does) as well as what the organization communicates (what it says). Yet the phrase "public relations" is used throughout articles in this data set to refer to both the relationship-related activities of organizations and also as a phrase meaning something like public opinion (as in the examples listed in the previous paragraph). This situation carries methodological implications for communication scholars who like to apply quantitative computer-assisted content analysis methods to investigate competing themes and frames in text. An advantage of computer-assisted content analysis is its ability to precisely measure distinct themes in a large set of text, based on the presence of key words. However, for such an analysis to provide meaningful results, it must be based on terms that are unambiguous. In the case of news media discussion of "public relations," the phrase is used in so many ways that plans for some types of analysis usually possible with computer-assisted content analysis were abandoned. Researchers have reported on multidimensional scaling techniques that were useful in identifying themes and frames in news media coverage on topics such as wetlands, pesticides, and breast cancer, all topics of unambiguous meaning. Such analysis was not performed in this study, however, after it was determined that the data set discussed "public relations" in such an astounding variety of ways. Practical implications of these findings for practitioners and educators are discussed in the final section of this paper. Frame Sponsorship A more qualitative, case study approach was adopted to look in some detail at a subset of the articles in this data set, those that mentioned the Public Relations Society of America. These articles were identified by using the VBPro search function to create a tagging search file, using the search phrase, "Public Relations Society of America." The procedure created a tagged search file listing all the articles, from the 618 in the data set (1988-2004 New York Times articles mentioning "public relations" and "ethics") that mentioned "Public Relations Society of America." The result was a set of six articles, mentioning the society one or more times, dating from April 1989 to April 2003. These were examined individually to assess what conclusions related to influences on their content might be drawn. Descriptions of each of the articles follow, then discussion of them as a group. An April 13, 1989 article headlined "Washington Talk; Taking Heat When the Boss is Under Fire" discusses several cases of challenges and frustrations of serving as official spokesperson to controversial public figures. Quoted as exemplars in the by-lined 18-paragraph, 881-word article are Mark R. Johnson, press secretary for Speaker Jim Wright and former spokesperson for a "beleaguered chairman of the Texas Air Corporation"; Patrick Korten, who represented then Attorney General Edward Meese 3rd; Lance Morgan, who earlier had been spokesperson for the special Senate committee investigating the Iran-contra scandal and who was then "part of the public relations team defending Michael R. Milken" who was charged with racketeering. John L. Paluszek, then president of the Public Relations Society of America, is quoted in comment on representing public officials caught in a scandal: " It's always in your best interest to get the matter out and behind you as quickly as possible. The way to do that is not to stonewall but to be forthcoming without violating confidences." A Nov. 4, 1991 page one business digest includes this brief item, followed by the page number for the article: "Ethics is the subject of the annual meeting of the Public Relations Society of America." The referenced Nov. 4, 1991 article is headlined "The Media Business: Advertising; Public Relations Conference is Devoted to Ethical Topics." The first paragraph refers to the society as well as its president: "Asked if it were not paradoxical for the annual meeting of the Public Relations Society of America to be devoted to ethics, the organization's president offered a response worthy of his profession." The response of then PRSA president Joe S. Epley follows: "Some people could be cynical about it; some people are cynical about the news media and reporters, too." The 13-paragraph, 511-word article quotes Epley once again ("individuals always have to make value judgments"), as well as three other PRSA conference presenters and organizers. The article mentions that the 44th national conference, with the theme of "What's Right? Confronting the Ethical Choices that Confront You," was in progress. An April 25, 1993 obituary biography is headlined "Rex F. Harlow, 100, A Pioneer in Publicity." The first paragraph describes him as "a leader in public relations who helped raise its professional standards," and reports his death at age 100 on April 16. The second of seven paragraphs states he "advocated social responsibility, including a code of ethics, and promoted the use of sociological and psychological research." The 242-word biography describes his role in founding the Public Relations Society of America (with the merging of two existing associations) and serving as a director of the society. His role in editing and writing public relations journals and books also is described. An April 10, 1994 letter to the editor is signed Joseph A. Vecchione, followed by the statement, "The writer is president of the Public Relations Society of America." The three-paragraph, 193-word letter begins, "We strongly endorse the warning to journalists to guard again communications abuses. The credibility of our profession and our 15,000 members rests on openness, integrity of fact and upfront declarations of representation. Anything less is unacceptable." In the final paragraph Vecchione writes, "We are naturally concerned about those who are not members of our professional society and obviously don't buy into the standards the rest of us respect." An April 1, 2003 article is headlined, "The Media Business: Advertising; P.R. firms alter their tone and worry about coverage as most eyes are on Iraq." The 18-paragraph, 818-word article suggests that as war was dominating the news, public relations professionals were depending less on media relations and more on "employee communications, investor relations and other tools that are not dependent on reporters." The by-lined article quotes six people including (in this order) an editor at PR Week; executives for the Hallmark Channel, United Parcel, and the Chicago office of Edelman; Reed Byrum Bolton, then president and chief executive of PRSA; and an executive at the New York office of Edelman. Bolton is cited in three paragraphs describing public relations as more than media relations and including a full spectrum "from investor relations to employee communications to strategic planning and platforming of an organization." He is given indirect attribution in urging avoidance of exploitation of conflict, and he is again quoted directly, "At the public relations society, we really stress ethical communications. This is a really good time for ethical communications." As these descriptions show, the ethical standards of the society are referenced numerous times in these articles, primarily by leaders in the society. None of these articles describe revisions in the PRSA Code of Ethics, though the time period in this study, 1988-2004, includes the two most recent code revisions in 1988 and 2000. National leaders of the society have managed to get the ethical code discussed occasionally in the national media, sometimes by writing letters to the editor that are published, and sometimes by talking about the code when they are interviewed by journalists. Limitations of Research Dearing and Rogers suggest that studies relating to "how an issue is framed, by whom, and with what regularity?" (1996, p. 95) are needed in further studies of the agenda-setting process, which includes the media agenda, the public agenda, and the policy agenda. This study looks only at the media agenda—specifically how public relations and ethics are discussed in the national media. This study looks at discussion of these topics only in The New York Times. Further analysis on coverage in other leading newspapers would be useful. Discussion The influence, at the media routines level, of news values on the content of this set of stories is notable. The role of the news value of timeliness is apparent in the articles on PRSA's annual conference, the death of a public relations pioneer, and the effect of the war on Iraq on available news space ("news hole"). Even more apparent is the striking role of the news value of prominence in most of these articles in which the president of PRSA is given voice in the media and makes statements in representation of the society and also the profession. Organizations such as PRSA may be more or less successful in getting a position on an issue heard in the media. Hallahan (1999) and others have referred to this as frame sponsorship. In the smaller set of articles reviewed above, PRSA achieved frame sponsorship in getting its position published in the media. It is not clear from the analysis conducted here whether some of these instances resulted from some initiation by a PRSA leader or whether the society officer was contacted by a journalist. Either way, in many of these articles the president of PRSA is quoted directly and indirectly in comment on important ethical issues and professional standards. The variety of meanings implied when "public relations" is mentioned suggests that popular language usage includes numerous definitions of public relations. Professional public relations practitioners who adhere to the PRSA code of ethics understand "public relations" as a strategic process involving research, research-based planning, implementation, and evaluation and as involving an organization's actions as well as its communications. Yet the phrase "public relations" is popularly used as a convenient modifier for almost anything involving public opinion. News media coverage includes routine usage of the phrase in both ways. One conclusion that might be drawn from this observation is that professional public relations practitioners who so carefully adhere to the PRSA code of ethics may not be communicating much when they talk with others about simply "public relations." It might be more effective, for example, to speak about "strategic public relations," "effective public relations," or "ethically defensible public relations." The importance of ethical conduct by businesses and the need for emphasis of ethics in public relations education are described by Bovet (1993), Thompson (1996), Solomon and Hanson (1989), Fitzpatrick (1996), Kruckeberg (2000), Seib & Fitzpatrick, 1995), and Toth, 1999). Professional public relations practitioners may take advantage of each opportunity to talk with journalists as a chance to discuss the leading association's code of ethics. Every interview by a journalist is a chance to engage in frame sponsorship.
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Table 1. Milestones in adoption and revisions of the Public Relations Society of America Code of Ethics. 1950 PRSA adopts first "Professional Standards for the Practice of Public Relations"
1954 Revised code is approved
1959 Revised code includes four principles and 16 articles
1963 Revised code emphasizes prohibition of conflicts of interest and use of front groups
1977 Revised code removes sexist language, bars members from guaranteeing results beyond their control
1983 Revised code clarifies language and format
1988 Revised 17-article code adds obligation of members to both the client/employer and the democratic process.
2000 Revised Member Code of Ethics includes six core values and six code provisions Abstracted from information in Fitzpatrick, 2002a, 89-100. Table 2. Frequency of distribution by year of 618 New York Times articles (1988-2004) mentioning "public relations" and "ethics"
1988 40 1989 39 1990 34 1991 38 1992 37 1993 37 1994 47 1995 41 1996 25 1997 39 1998 29 1999 25 2000 43 2001 38 2002 46 2003 30 2004 30
Table 3. Prominent themes identified in 618 New York Times articles (1988-2004) mentioning "public relations" and "ethics" Theme Terms Frequency Total by theme "Business" 7,129 Company 1,563 Business 1,116 Companies 794 Industry 596 Corporate 440 Employees 289 Community 253 Corporation 231 Marketing 219 Manager 217 Workers 214 Leaders 196 Managers 165 Organizations 164 Leadership 150 Customers 143 Reputation 142 Consumers 122 Consumer 115
"National Government" 5,052 President 1,461 Political 765 Campaign 758 Government 721 National 533 Federal 493 Administration 321
"Medical Research" 4,015 University 714 School 701 Research 438 Health 521 Students 381 Medical 346 Professor 304 College 296 Education 238 Treatment 175 Scientists 101 Experiments 100 Table 3, continued Theme Terms Frequency Total by Theme
"Media" 3,413 Press 431 Information 372 Report 352 Television 334 Advertising 306 Media 290 Reporters 236 Editor 183 Reports 178 Published 144 Newspaper 136 Reporter 119 Journalists 114 Reported 111 Journalism 107
"Legal" 2,920 Law 654 Lawyers 504 Court 411 Attorney 259 Justice 255 Action 195 Crime 179 Moral 170 Prosecutors 138 Documents 131 Laws 124
"Issues" 2,469 Issues 408 Issue 403 Problems 314 Problem 307 Investigation 287 Charges 238 Critics 210 Scandal 192 Trouble 110
"Money" 2,144 Money 798 Financial 444 Fund 416 Investment 202 Funds 185 Investors 143 Spending 129 Securities 127
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