Similar Items: To what extent does South Africa's legal framework offer adequate protection to victims of non-consensual pornography?
- The Deepfake Dilemma: Fake Images, Real Victims, and the Legal Void in Addressing Non-Consensual Deepfake Pornography
- Justifications for re-sharing non-consensual pornography on social media platforms: A case of South Africa
- The failure of the European Union to offer adequate protection to refugee women
- To what extent does UK law protect victims from taking, making and sharing intimate images without consent in an age of emerging technology?
- To what extent does governance affect funding of non-government organisations in Mauritius?
- Exposing Sedated Legal Responses to Non-Consensual Pelvic Exams Under Anesthesia
Author: Omar, Jameelah
- The Constitutional application of the Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998
- Towards a policy on naming and shaming of sex offenders in Botswana: lessons learnt from South Africa and United States of America
- Criminalising cannabis in South Africa: a history and post-Prince discussion
- To what extent does South Africa's legal framework offer adequate protection to victims of non-consensual pornography?
- Pathological vs non-pathological incapacity: are the differences in requirements and consequences justified?
- Sexual violence against children in South Africa: the protection of child victims in the criminal justice system