1st Edition

Social Media, Criminal Law and Legality

By Laura Higson-Bliss Copyright 2025
294 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

294 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

294 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Utilising Lon Fuller’s conception of legality, this book argues that current legal provisions often used to control online abuse aided by social media do not conform to the basic principles of legality in the criminal law, in turn, threatening freedom of expression. How we regulate inappropriate behaviour online, often referred to as online abuse, particularly online abuse aided by social... Read more

Part One

1. Introduction

2. Freedom of Expression: The Online Context

3. Regulating Social Media: Theoretical Positioning

 

 

Part Two

4. Online Racism and the Criminal Law

5. Harassment and Stalking Online

6. Abusive Communications Online: The Development of Communication Law

7. The Future of Communication Law

 

 

Part Three

8. Regulating Online Behaviour in the United Kingdom: Beyond the Criminal

9. International Perspectives on Social Media and the Law

10. Conclusion

  

Biography

Laura Higson-Bliss is a Lecturer in Law at Keele University, United Kingdom, joining Keele School of Law in 2021. Her interests, broadly conceived, are in the interaction between social media and the criminal law, legality, freedom of expression and law and new technologies. Laura is an author of several blogs and a regular contributor to wider discussions on social media regulation on the radio and television, both nationally and internationally.