"This volume [...] makes a significant internatinoal contribution to the discipline by demonstrating how a Buddhist approach can build understanding of journalism's place in the world and its power, and be used to improve journalism practice." --Lisa Waller, Australian Journalism Review 37(1)"All in all, the book is an important contribution to the value of religions - here Buddhism - for journalism ethics though one might also argue that this is not only for journalists in the strict sense but for anybody involved in communication which is in a didtal world almost everybody." -- Franz-Josef, svd, Journal of the Asian Research Center for Religion and Social Communication"[T]he authors deserve many compliments for bringing out such a unified and exemplary alternative paradigm that is useful for both media academics and practitioners across the globe. Further, academics do well by prescribing this as a text as part of the curriculum of media ethics and practices in all the universities. In fact such an exercise will facilitate a broader debate and rethinking among the stakeholders on the need to revise or revisit the existing obsolescent and negative-centric media ethics and practices." --C. S. H. N. Murthy, Asian Journal of Communication "Mindful Journalism and News Ethics in the Digital Era could easily become a testament to journalism practitioners and students to measure newsworthiness by the standard of mindful gatekeeping which determines a very simple path but one that needs cultivation of a technique in a true human sense. The editor authors of this book have endeavored consistently to globalize journalism studies by the fusion of West-centric mainstream journalism studies and Eastern philosophies." --Chandrika De Alwis, The International Communication Gazette