About
Deni Elliott is the author of more than 200 articles and book chapters for the scholarly, trade and lay press. She is an author or editor of 11 books including CATCHING SIGHT: How a guide dog helped me see myself (Beacon Press); Ethics for a Digital Era (Wiley/Blackwell); Ethical Challenges: Building an Ethics Toolkit (Authorhouse); Ethics in the First Person, A Guide to Teaching and Learning Practical Ethics (Rowman & Littlefield), The Kindness of Strangers, Philanthropy in Higher Education (Rowman & Littlefield), Contemporary Issues: Journalism (ABC-CLIO), Ethics of Scientific Research, A Guidebook for Course Development, (UPNE), Research Ethics: A Reader, (UPNE); The Ethics of Asking: Dilemmas in Higher Education Fundraising, (Johns Hopkins University Press), Parts and Parity: Ethics and Organ Transplantation (Institute for Study of Applied and Professional Ethics) and Responsible Journalism (SAGE). She has co-produced three documentaries: The Burden of Knowledge, on ethical questions of pre-natal testing, and A Case of Need and Buying Time, which both address ethical issues raised by news media coverage of medical and financial need. The documentaries are distributed by Fanlight Productions. Deni wrote and co-hosted Ethically Speaking, a weekly 2-minute radio show for Montana Public Radio with some shows syndicated through PRX (Public Radio Exchange) 2003-2006.
Deni is Project Co-Director for the National Ethics Project and an Ethics Consultant/Expert Witness through her company, Ethically Speaking, LLC and is a subject matter expert for the National Center on Disability and Journalism. She is professor emeritus in the Department of Journalism and Digital Communication at the University of South Florida. Deni held the endowed Eleanor Poynter Jamison Chair in Media Ethics and Press Policy at USF from 2003-2023. Within her two decades at USF she also served as Interim Regional Vice Chancellor of Academic Affairs (2021-2022) department chair (2012-2018), and campus ombuds (2004-2017).
Prior academic appointments include University of Montana: Mansfield Professor of Ethics and Public Affairs, University Professor of Ethics, Professor of Philosophy, and Founding Director, Practical Ethics Center; Dartmouth College: Director, Ethics Institute, Adjunct Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy and Associate Research Professor, Department of Education. Deni’s first tenure-track and tenured appointment was in Utah State University’s Department of Mass Communication. Deni also served as Ethics Officer for the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (2004-2012).
Deni has a B.A. in Communication from University of Maryland, M.A. in Philosophy from Wayne State University and an Ed.D. in Philosophy of Education from Harvard University. Her work at Harvard included coursework in the Kennedy School of Government, Department of Philosophy, Law School and Graduate School of Education. Professors Sissela Bok, Lawrence Kohlberg, Martin Linsky, and Israel Scheffler served as her doctoral examination committee members and mentors.
Featured Work
Catching Sight: How a guide dog helped me see myself
One woman's journey through progressive blindness and the extraordinary guide dog who kept her safe along the way
When ethics scholar Deni Elliott, born with limited vision, realized she could no longer navigate the world safely alone, she turned to a guide dog—a decision that reshaped her understanding of disability and independence. Co-authored with master trainer Graham Buck, Catching Sight offers a behind-the-scenes look at the world of guide dog breeding and training, revealing the intelligence and decision-making skills these dogs develop from birth.
Catching Sight is for readers interested in the transformative power of human relationships with animals. As Deni confronts her changing reality, she shares the hidden world of guide dog training and introduces Alberta, a yellow Lab whose quiet brilliance changed her interaction with the world and herself.
Catching Sight offers a fresh and unforgettable perspective on disability, identity, and the power of partnership.
