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Do global legal frameworks hold social media platforms accountable for hosting content that incites violence?

The digital era has witnessed an unprecedented expansion in social media platforms' use, influence, and societal impact.1 Sixty percent of the global population uses social media, with the daily exchange of messages reaching into the billions.2 As of 2023, Facebook boasts 2.98 billion monthly active...

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Main Author: Rubenstein, Ruvenna Samantha
Other Authors: Lutchman, Salona
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Public Law 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Rubenstein, Ruvenna Samantha
author2 Lutchman, Salona
author_browse Lutchman, Salona
Rubenstein, Ruvenna Samantha
author_facet Lutchman, Salona
Rubenstein, Ruvenna Samantha
author_sort Rubenstein, Ruvenna Samantha
collection Thesis
description The digital era has witnessed an unprecedented expansion in social media platforms' use, influence, and societal impact.1 Sixty percent of the global population uses social media, with the daily exchange of messages reaching into the billions.2 As of 2023, Facebook boasts 2.98 billion monthly active users,3 YouTube exceeds 2.68 billion users,4 and X (formerly Twitter) had 450 million users.5 These platforms offer users unrestricted capacity for expressing views and communication, often with minimal (though not constant) oversight while facilitating the concealment of user identities.6 While this technological advancement has opened new avenues for global connectivity and communication, it has also given rise to an alarming increase in the spread of hate speech.7 In the last twenty years, these online platforms have evolved into environments where hateful narratives and stereotypes flourish unchecked, primarily aimed at marginalized groups, leading to increased communal violence, ethnic cleansing, and even genocide.8 Major platforms such as Facebook, X, and YouTube have been criticized for failing to remove harmful content promptly and effectively and for mistakenly removing content that does not breach their policies.9 This research endeavours to comprehensively investigate the accountability of social media platforms in addressing and mitigating the impact of hate speech that fuels acts of violence within the public sphere. Legal, ethical, and technological perspectives will be considered to examine the responsibilities borne by social media platforms in moderating user-generated content. A detailed analysis of existing legal frameworks, both national and international, governing hate speech and its consequences will be conducted to evaluate whether social media platforms are held accountable for content that incites violence. A comparative analysis of diverse social media platforms will be integral to this research, considering variations in policies, enforcement mechanisms, and responsiveness to instances of hate speech inciting violence. Case studies will be examined to illustrate specific incidents, shedding light on the challenges faced by social media platforms and the repercussions of inadequately addressing hate speech. This research aims to determine the legal responsibilities and accountability of social media platforms for hosting content that incites violence and examines whether the current measures are sufficient in addressing this critical issue.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:53:01.824Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
publishDateSort 2026
publisher Department of Public Law
publisherStr Department of Public Law
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42658 Do global legal frameworks hold social media platforms accountable for hosting content that incites violence? Rubenstein, Ruvenna Samantha Lutchman, Salona Social media Violence Legal The digital era has witnessed an unprecedented expansion in social media platforms' use, influence, and societal impact.1 Sixty percent of the global population uses social media, with the daily exchange of messages reaching into the billions.2 As of 2023, Facebook boasts 2.98 billion monthly active users,3 YouTube exceeds 2.68 billion users,4 and X (formerly Twitter) had 450 million users.5 These platforms offer users unrestricted capacity for expressing views and communication, often with minimal (though not constant) oversight while facilitating the concealment of user identities.6 While this technological advancement has opened new avenues for global connectivity and communication, it has also given rise to an alarming increase in the spread of hate speech.7 In the last twenty years, these online platforms have evolved into environments where hateful narratives and stereotypes flourish unchecked, primarily aimed at marginalized groups, leading to increased communal violence, ethnic cleansing, and even genocide.8 Major platforms such as Facebook, X, and YouTube have been criticized for failing to remove harmful content promptly and effectively and for mistakenly removing content that does not breach their policies.9 This research endeavours to comprehensively investigate the accountability of social media platforms in addressing and mitigating the impact of hate speech that fuels acts of violence within the public sphere. Legal, ethical, and technological perspectives will be considered to examine the responsibilities borne by social media platforms in moderating user-generated content. A detailed analysis of existing legal frameworks, both national and international, governing hate speech and its consequences will be conducted to evaluate whether social media platforms are held accountable for content that incites violence. A comparative analysis of diverse social media platforms will be integral to this research, considering variations in policies, enforcement mechanisms, and responsiveness to instances of hate speech inciting violence. Case studies will be examined to illustrate specific incidents, shedding light on the challenges faced by social media platforms and the repercussions of inadequately addressing hate speech. This research aims to determine the legal responsibilities and accountability of social media platforms for hosting content that incites violence and examines whether the current measures are sufficient in addressing this critical issue. 2026-01-22T12:11:13Z 2026-01-22T12:11:13Z 2025 2026-01-22T10:58:11Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42658 en eng application/pdf Department of Public Law Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Social media
Violence
Legal
Rubenstein, Ruvenna Samantha
Do global legal frameworks hold social media platforms accountable for hosting content that incites violence?
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Do global legal frameworks hold social media platforms accountable for hosting content that incites violence?
title_full Do global legal frameworks hold social media platforms accountable for hosting content that incites violence?
title_fullStr Do global legal frameworks hold social media platforms accountable for hosting content that incites violence?
title_full_unstemmed Do global legal frameworks hold social media platforms accountable for hosting content that incites violence?
title_short Do global legal frameworks hold social media platforms accountable for hosting content that incites violence?
title_sort do global legal frameworks hold social media platforms accountable for hosting content that incites violence
topic Social media
Violence
Legal
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42658
work_keys_str_mv AT rubensteinruvennasamantha dogloballegalframeworksholdsocialmediaplatformsaccountableforhostingcontentthatincitesviolence