🎯 Which aspects are addressed (or criminalised) by laws, as opposed to other non-binding measures?
Do you recall the categories of risks which children face? We mentioned five categories – inappropriate content, inappropriate contact, inappropriate conduct, health-related risks, and consumer-related issues – as well as the more heinous crime of sexual exploitation and abuse which these risks can lead to.
When it comes to legislation, some laws make certain content, contact, or conduct illegal, with varying degrees of interpretations from country to country. Certain contact- and conduct-related activities, in fact, are punishable as criminal offences in many countries. This largely depends on the type of risk or behaviour we are referring to.
For instance, when it comes to sexual exploitation and abuse, there are a number of primary instruments on an international level, which have inspired other instruments on a regional level. The international instruments include:
The International Labour Organization’s Convention Concerning the Prohibition and Immediate Action for the Elimination of the worst forms of Child Labour, which calls on members to take immediate and effective measures to secure the prohibition and elimination of ‘the worst forms of child labour’, including prostitution (Article 3).
📚 Resource
The International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children (ICMEC)’s framework for assessing legislation is an important resource for enacting, reviewing, and updating legislation. Introduced in 2006, the framework is updated regularly, and includes a ‘menu of concepts’ to be considered when drafting legislation.
 Access the latest version – the 9th edition, published in 2018 – and check out ICMEC’s review of the legislation in your country. How is your country doing? What should be improved?
Exercise What are the legal provisions in your country’s cybersecurity strategy or legislation that explicitly protect children online? |