Hate speech and racial slurs in the South Afican context : where to start
Abstract
Protecting people against hate speech and racist slurs requires
weighing up several fundamental rights. To maintain legitimacy
in enforcing the legislative protection, a fine balance must be
struck between the rights to equality and dignity on the one hand
and freedom of speech on the other hand. An analysis of the
legislative framework ousting hate speech and unfair
discrimination on the basis of race and the manner in which the
different relevant provisions have been applied by the courts
shows that there are discrepancies that must be addressed.
Despite the differences between the policy that facilitated the
adoption of the Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair
Discrimination Act 4 of 2000 and the Employment Equity Act 55
of 1998, an alignment must be achieved in the starting point for
an objective enquiry dealing with racism. To excuse serious
cases of hate speech perpetrated by one population group while
presuming that the other population group is racist from the
outset does not promote South Africa's nation-building project.
On the flipside, to address the unbalanced method of
interpretation and implementation of the legislative provisions by
adjusting the vantage point from which the assessment into
whether an utterance is racist and derogatory is commenced
would advance the constitutional value of non-racialism.
Collections
- PER: 2020 Volume 23 [48]