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The problem with using public order laws to govern online speech


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The problem with using public order laws to govern online speech

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Scotland’s new hate ****** law came into force on April 1, sparking immediate controversy over its potential effects on freedom of speech and expression, especially online. The Hate ****** and Public Order (Scotland)

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expands on current laws about ******* that have the possibility to stir up hatred, in Scotland only.

A “hate ******” itself is not its own specific offense under existing laws, or the new law. But if you are found to commit another ****** (for example, ********) and it is proven that this was based on hostility against someone’s protected characteristic (usually race, religion, disability or ******* orientation) you can be given a harsher sentence.

The new law in Scotland introduces the

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of “stirring up hatred”—either in person or online—related to to age, disability, religion, ******* orientation, transgender identity or being intersex. This does not extend beyond Scotland.

A stirring up offense is committed if someone behaves in a way that the average person on the street would consider to be threatening or abusive, and that behavior is based on the victim’s protected characteristic. To find someone guilty, it must be proven that their aim or purpose was to stir up hatred. This is a high threshold and difficult to prove.

Alongside threatening or abusive behavior in person, the law criminalizes sending such communications online. This has been the most controversial change. Critics ***** it could

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, especially online, where context is everything, but is often lost.

Of particular concern have been discussions over transgender identity—author JK Rowling challenged police to arrest her over a series of posts describing transgender women as men, though police say this

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to a ******.

But should a law like this even be used to govern online speech?

Stirring up offenses online

The rationale behind public order legislation, including the new Scottish law, has always been to maintain public order during a time of disorder. It is difficult to argue that online comments can amount to ********* offenses that threaten public order.

Public order prosecutions of people who make hateful or prejudicial comments online

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—and successful convictions even rarer. There are only a handful of cases in the public domain to use as examples.

In 2012, Liam Stacey, a student, was

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in jail under the Public Order Act 1986 for sending tweets intended to stir up ******* hatred aimed at footballer
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. As I and other legal scholars
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, while Stacey’s tweets were clearly abusive, they never threatened public order. And yet, he was convicted of a public order offense, under a law enacted 20 years before
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even existed.

The act was also successfully used to prosecute 45-year-old Wigan man

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, who received a 16-month custodial sentence in 2022 for posting anti-Semitic and ******* commentary online.

Distinguishing between intent to stir up hatred and speech intended to inform rather than offend is incredibly complex, especially online where proving public order is under threat is near impossible. Indeed, speech intended to inform is protected under the

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, even if it could be construed as *******.

In most cases, online comments have been successfully prosecuted under other existing laws, such as communications offenses.

Following England’s defeat in the 2020 Euros, three people were

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for public order offenses relating to stirring up ******* hatred. But, in the event,
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later
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and
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of sending a grossly offensive message in violation of the
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, as opposed to a public order offense.

Scotland had another law that dealt specifically with threatening communications, as well as behavior at football matches, with provisions in place to uplift sentencing for communications grounded in hate. This law was used

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, and was later repealed following concerns that it was illiberal and unfairly targeted football fans.

In England and Wales, provisions such as the Malicious Communications Act and the Protection from Harassment Act have been used to prosecute people for offensive comments online. The

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also allows the courts to “uplift” a person’s sentence under any ********* provision, if their offense is proven to be aggravated by hate. This is used much more commonly than specific public order offenses.

Fighting hate online

Scottish government officials have

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as a significant step forward in protecting people from hate and prejudice. The reporting of hate ******* across Scotland has been
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compared to other jurisdictions.

But there is little evidence that the offense of stirring up hatred itself is effective in tackling

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, which is certainly
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. The reality is that prosecutions for harmful online speech are likely to fall under other existing laws.

If we really want to tackle the rise in hate online (which

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seem to suggest we do), public order legislation and the weight of the ********* law will never work. It is only through open and public debate and better education that we can enact change.

Provided by
The Conversation


This article is republished from

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under a Creative Commons license. Read the
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.

Citation:
Scotland’s hate ****** law: The problem with using public order laws to govern online speech (2024, April 24)
retrieved 24 April 2024
from

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part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.







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