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Missing the Right(s) Point: How Australia’s Social Media Ban Fails Children and the Case for a Holistic Rights-Based Approach to Online Safety

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:American University International Law Review
Format: Online Article RSS Article
Published: 2026
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container_title American University International Law Review
description
discipline_display International Law
discipline_facet International Law
format Online Article
RSS Article
genre Journal Article
id rss_article:67266
institution FRELIP
journal_source_facet American University International Law Review
publishDate 2026
publishDateSort 2026
record_format rss_article
spellingShingle Missing the Right(s) Point: How Australia’s Social Media Ban Fails Children and the Case for a Holistic Rights-Based Approach to Online Safety
International Law
General
International Law
sub_discipline_display General
sub_discipline_facet General
subject_display International Law
General
International Law
International Law
General
International Law
subject_facet International Law
General
International Law
title Missing the Right(s) Point: How Australia’s Social Media Ban Fails Children and the Case for a Holistic Rights-Based Approach to Online Safety
title_auth Missing the Right(s) Point: How Australia’s Social Media Ban Fails Children and the Case for a Holistic Rights-Based Approach to Online Safety
title_full Missing the Right(s) Point: How Australia’s Social Media Ban Fails Children and the Case for a Holistic Rights-Based Approach to Online Safety
title_fullStr Missing the Right(s) Point: How Australia’s Social Media Ban Fails Children and the Case for a Holistic Rights-Based Approach to Online Safety
title_full_unstemmed Missing the Right(s) Point: How Australia’s Social Media Ban Fails Children and the Case for a Holistic Rights-Based Approach to Online Safety
title_short Missing the Right(s) Point: How Australia’s Social Media Ban Fails Children and the Case for a Holistic Rights-Based Approach to Online Safety
title_sort missing the right(s) point: how australia’s social media ban fails children and the case for a holistic rights-based approach to online safety
topic International Law
General
International Law
url https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/auilr/vol41/iss2/2