Litcius/Paper detail

Regulatory Responses to ‘Fake News’ and Freedom of Expression: Normative and Empirical Evaluation

Rebecca K. Helm, Hitoshi Nasu

2020Human Rights Law Review45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract National authorities have responded with different regulatory solutions in attempts to minimise the adverse impact of fake news and associated information disorder. This article reviews three different regulatory approaches that have emerged in recent years—information correction, content removal or blocking, and criminal sanctions—and critically evaluates their normative compliance with the applicable rules of international human rights law and their likely effectiveness based on an evidence-based psychological analysis. It identifies, albeit counter intuitively, criminal sanction as an effective regulatory response that can be justified when it is carefully tailored in a way that addresses legitimate interests to be protected.

Topics & Concepts

SanctionsNormativePolitical scienceLaw and economicsCompliance (psychology)LawCriminal lawExpression (computer science)Human rightsEmpirical evidenceFreedom of the pressBusinessPsychologySocial psychologySociologyComputer scienceEpistemologyPoliticsProgramming languagePhilosophyHate Speech and Cyberbullying DetectionMisinformation and Its ImpactsPrivacy, Security, and Data Protection
Regulatory Responses to ‘Fake News’ and Freedom of Expression: Normative and Empirical Evaluation | Litcius