Organizations
How companies, institutions, and movements embody the sixteen values.
The New York Times
Integrity as brand and obligation
The New York Times built its institutional position on the claim that its journalism is more accurate, more thoroughly verified, and more rigorous in distinguishing reporting from opinion than its competitors. The 'All the News That's Fit to Print' masthead is an integrity-oriented claim: the standard is not what is interesting or what sells but what is fit - a normative claim about quality and appropriateness. The internal culture of extensive fact-checking, the letters of correction, and the ethics guidelines all express mastery combined with integrity.
The New York Times
Integrity as brand and obligation
The New York Times built its institutional position on the claim that its journalism is more accurate, more thoroughly verified, and more rigorous in distinguishing reporting from opinion than its competitors. The 'All the News That's Fit to Print' masthead is an integrity-oriented claim: the standard is not what is interesting or what sells but what is fit - a normative claim about quality and appropriateness. The internal culture of extensive fact-checking, the letters of correction, and the ethics guidelines all express mastery combined with integrity.
Investigative reporting that has changed law and policy, from the Pentagon Papers to the Harvey Weinstein reporting. A newsroom culture that takes correction seriously enough to publish it prominently. International coverage at a depth that no other American news organization maintains.
A culture of distinction from competitors that can shade into institutional self-regard unchecked by external accountability. Political coverage that treats the 'both sides' frame as an integrity standard when the asymmetry of facts doesn't support it. Digital subscription economics that have changed what it means to be a public interest institution.
The Pentagon Papers, 1971 - the decision to publish classified documents over the explicit objection of the Nixon administration, on the grounds that the public's right to know superseded the government's preference for secrecy.
BBC
Nation shall speak peace unto nation
The BBC was founded on John Reith’s conviction that broadcasting had an obligation to inform, educate, and entertain in that order, and that fulfilling those obligations required institutional independence from both commercial pressure and government direction. The BBC’s integrity-orientation is expressed in the structural commitment to accuracy, impartiality, and editorial independence that distinguishes it from state media on one side and commercial media on the other. The license fee model, which funds the BBC through direct public payment rather than advertising or government appropriation, was designed to preserve that independence.
BBC
Nation shall speak peace unto nation
The BBC was founded on John Reith’s conviction that broadcasting had an obligation to inform, educate, and entertain in that order, and that fulfilling those obligations required institutional independence from both commercial pressure and government direction. The BBC’s integrity-orientation is expressed in the structural commitment to accuracy, impartiality, and editorial independence that distinguishes it from state media on one side and commercial media on the other. The license fee model, which funds the BBC through direct public payment rather than advertising or government appropriation, was designed to preserve that independence.
World Service broadcasting that has provided reliable information to populations under authoritarian media environments for a century. Documentary and drama output whose production standards have defined the global benchmark for public service broadcasting. A journalism culture whose commitment to accuracy has, at its best, produced reporting that governments could not control.
The institutional tension between editorial independence and a license fee that requires Parliamentary approval, making the BBC perpetually vulnerable to government pressure on coverage of government conduct. A culture of institutional self-protection that has at times delayed accountability for internal misconduct. The Savile case - the BBC’s failure to investigate and publish journalism it possessed about a serial sexual predator employed by the institution - demonstrating the limits of the integrity culture when the subject of the investigation is inside the institution.
The BBC’s refusal in 1926 to broadcast government propaganda during the General Strike, establishing that independence from government direction was a structural commitment rather than a convenience.
The Economist
Clarity as the only standard
The Economist was founded to oppose the Corn Laws - a specific piece of economic protectionism - and to advocate for free trade as a matter of principle. The publication has maintained its founding commitment to a specific set of liberal economic values for 180 years, presenting them not as ideology but as the logical conclusions of careful analysis. The style guide enforces a lucidity standard so demanding that the publication has never used bylines: every piece of writing is the publication’s view, not any individual journalist’s, expressed with the same directness and confidence regardless of subject.
The Economist
Clarity as the only standard
The Economist was founded to oppose the Corn Laws - a specific piece of economic protectionism - and to advocate for free trade as a matter of principle. The publication has maintained its founding commitment to a specific set of liberal economic values for 180 years, presenting them not as ideology but as the logical conclusions of careful analysis. The style guide enforces a lucidity standard so demanding that the publication has never used bylines: every piece of writing is the publication’s view, not any individual journalist’s, expressed with the same directness and confidence regardless of subject.
A writing standard that makes complex economic, political, and scientific subjects accessible to an intelligent general reader without sacrificing accuracy. An editorial consistency that allows readers to disagree with the conclusions while trusting the analysis. A global perspective that covers the world as a single subject rather than as a collection of national stories.
An editorial confidence that can shade into institutional certainty - the assumption that the liberal economic framework is not ideology but simply correct analysis. Coverage of the developing world that has at times treated economic development as a technical problem with a known solution rather than a political problem with contested values. The specific failure mode of intelligence without humility.
The 1843 founding editorial by James Wilson, arguing that free trade was not merely economically efficient but morally required - establishing the Economist’s model of presenting political positions as logical conclusions.
Human Rights Watch
Documentation as accountability
Human Rights Watch was founded on the premise that the systematic documentation of human rights violations, conducted with the rigor of legal evidence and published with the credibility of an internationally recognized institution, is a form of practical intervention. The organization’s methodology - researchers on the ground, interviews with witnesses and perpetrators, cross-referenced documentation, legal analysis - is designed to produce findings that governments, courts, and the UN cannot dismiss as advocacy. The integrity of the documentation is the mechanism of the impact.
Human Rights Watch
Documentation as accountability
Human Rights Watch was founded on the premise that the systematic documentation of human rights violations, conducted with the rigor of legal evidence and published with the credibility of an internationally recognized institution, is a form of practical intervention. The organization’s methodology - researchers on the ground, interviews with witnesses and perpetrators, cross-referenced documentation, legal analysis - is designed to produce findings that governments, courts, and the UN cannot dismiss as advocacy. The integrity of the documentation is the mechanism of the impact.
Research that has provided the evidentiary foundation for international criminal prosecutions. Reports that have changed specific military and police practices in the countries documented. A credibility with international institutions that makes HRW findings actionable in ways that advocacy without documentation cannot achieve.
The challenge of maintaining methodological rigor while working in environments where access and personal safety are both constrained. The institutional tension between producing findings quickly enough to matter and producing findings thoroughly enough to be unimpeachable. The perception of Western institutional bias in coverage that has documented abuses by US allies at different depth than abuses by US adversaries.
The 1993 documentation of ‘ethnic cleansing’ in Bosnia, which provided the conceptual and evidentiary framework that eventually produced the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.
Consumer Reports
The test says what the test says
Consumer Reports was founded on the conviction that the relationship between manufacturers and consumers was fundamentally adversarial and that consumers needed an independent testing organization whose conclusions were not purchasable. The founding principle was methodological integrity: test everything with the same rigorous protocol, report what you find, and accept no advertising that could compromise the finding. For nearly ninety years this has made Consumer Reports the most trusted product evaluation service in the United States and the organization most hated by the manufacturers whose products it tests.
Consumer Reports
The test says what the test says
Consumer Reports was founded on the conviction that the relationship between manufacturers and consumers was fundamentally adversarial and that consumers needed an independent testing organization whose conclusions were not purchasable. The founding principle was methodological integrity: test everything with the same rigorous protocol, report what you find, and accept no advertising that could compromise the finding. For nearly ninety years this has made Consumer Reports the most trusted product evaluation service in the United States and the organization most hated by the manufacturers whose products it tests.
Automobile safety testing that forced design changes saving hundreds of thousands of lives. Appliance testing giving consumers reliable comparative data unavailable from manufacturer-controlled sources. A reputation for honest evaluation maintained across a period in which every other media organization became economically dependent on the industries it covers.
A testing methodology that can be gamed by manufacturers who learn to optimize for the specific metrics Consumer Reports measures rather than the broader quality those metrics represent. A digital transition making the paid subscription model harder to sustain at the scale needed to fund rigorous testing. An institutional tendency toward exhaustive technical specificity that can obscure the practical consumer guidance it exists to provide.
The 2007 withdrawal of a child safety seat recommendation after discovering its own testing protocol was insufficient, followed by public acknowledgment of the error - demonstrating that institutional integrity requires the willingness to correct rather than defend.
ProPublica
Public interest journalism in the public interest
ProPublica was founded on the premise that the economic collapse of investigative journalism was creating an accountability crisis for institutions of public power, and that nonprofit journalism supported by philanthropic funding could provide the investigative capacity that commercial journalism could no longer sustain. The newsroom publishes its work free of charge, makes its data available to partner newsrooms, and measures itself against a single standard: whether the work produced accountability that would not otherwise have existed.
ProPublica
Public interest journalism in the public interest
ProPublica was founded on the premise that the economic collapse of investigative journalism was creating an accountability crisis for institutions of public power, and that nonprofit journalism supported by philanthropic funding could provide the investigative capacity that commercial journalism could no longer sustain. The newsroom publishes its work free of charge, makes its data available to partner newsrooms, and measures itself against a single standard: whether the work produced accountability that would not otherwise have existed.
Nursing home investigations. The stealth fighter reporting. Collaborative partnerships with local newsrooms multiplying the impact of a single investigative team's work. Pulitzer Prizes for work that commercial newspapers could not have funded under contemporary economics.
A philanthropic funding model creating the possibility of structural editorial influence by large donors even when that influence is not explicit. The difficulty of measuring whether accountability journalism changes institutional behavior rather than simply documenting institutional failure.
The 2010 Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting on Hurricane Katrina's aftermath, establishing that a two-year-old nonprofit with no print edition could produce journalism winning the most significant award in American journalism.