
Media Ethics and Responsible Journalism: The Professional Foundation Delight Journalism Students Build
By Delight Technical College | School of Media & AI- Digital Journalism | 2026
Journalism is power. The ability to shape public opinion, set the agenda for national conversation, expose wrongdoing, and amplify the voices of the marginalised is an extraordinary privilege. But with that power comes responsibility. A responsibility that is not just professional but deeply ethical. At Delight Technical College, media ethics is not a separate module tacked onto the Digital Journalism curriculum. It is woven into every aspect of how journalism is taught because we believe that a journalist without ethics is not a journalist at all.
⚖️ The Foundation: What Are Media Ethics?
Media ethics refers to the principles and standards that govern how journalists gather, verify, and present information. These principles protect both the public interest and the individuals affected by journalism. The core ethical principles taught at Delight include:
Truth and Accuracy:
The most fundamental journalistic obligation. Every factual claim must be verified before publication. When errors are made, they must be corrected promptly and prominently. Accuracy is not aspirational, it is the baseline minimum standard of professional journalism.
Independence:
Journalists must be free from the influence of the people and organisations they cover. This means refusing gifts, avoiding conflicts of interest, and being transparent about any relationships that might influence coverage. In Kenya, where the relationship between media and political power is complex, independence requires constant vigilance.
Fairness and Impartiality:
All parties affected by a story should have the opportunity to respond before publication. Journalists should seek to understand and represent multiple perspectives even when covering stories where one side is clearly wrong. Fairness does not mean false balance; it means genuine effort to represent reality accurately.
Minimising Harm:
Journalism that serves the public interest can still cause harm to individuals. The ethical journalist asks: is this information necessary? Is the public benefit proportionate to the harm? Are vulnerable people being treated with appropriate care?
Accountability:
Journalists and news organisations must be accountable for what they publish willing to hear complaints, correct errors, and explain their editorial decisions.
🇰🇪 Media Ethics in the Kenyan Context
Kenya’s media landscape presents specific ethical challenges that Delight addresses directly:
- Political pressure- the relationship between media ownership and political interests
- Ethnic sensitivity- reporting on ethnicity and political conflict responsibly
- Source protection in a surveillance environment- protecting vulnerable sources from retaliation
- Electoral journalism- the specific ethical responsibilities of covering elections
- Economic pressures- the challenge of maintaining editorial independence when advertisers exert influence
- Social media misinformation- the responsibility not to amplify unverified claims
📋 Practical Ethics- Scenarios and Decision-Making
Delight’s journalism ethics training goes beyond principles to practice. Students work through real ethical scenarios. The kinds of decisions that professional journalists face regularly:
- Should you publish a story that is true but will cause significant harm to an innocent person?
- A source provides information that is clearly in the public interest but obtained illegally- do you publish?
- A government official offers an exclusive in exchange for not running a damaging story- how do you respond?
- An image you have taken captures a moment of genuine private grief- is it right to publish it?
- Social media is full of allegations about a public figure that you cannot verify them in time for deadline. What do you do?
🌐 Digital Ethics- The New Challenges
- Verification in a real-time news environment- the pressure to publish fast and the obligation to publish right
- AI-generated content- the responsibility to disclose and not publish AI fabrications as news
- Social media stalking and privacy- the ethics of using social media to investigate private individuals
- Deepfake journalism- the growing challenge of verifying video and audio in an age of AI manipulation
💼 Why Ethics Makes Better Journalists
A journalist known for ethical practice builds credibility that takes years to establish and can be lost in a single lapse. Sources trust ethical journalists with better information. Audiences believe ethical journalists more readily. Editors and employers prefer ethical journalists for the most sensitive and important assignments. In Kenya’s competitive media landscape, a reputation for integrity is one of the most valuable professional assets a journalist can possess.
“Ethics is not a constraint on great journalism, it is the foundation of it. The stories that change the world are not just well-written and well-sourced. They are true. At Delight, we train journalists who are committed to truth above everything else.”
📍 Delight Technical College | Muindi Mbingu Street, Opposite Jevanjee Gardens, Nairobi | +254 722 533 771 | www.delight.ac.ke



