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Recent Australian laws risk undermining fundamental freedoms and weakening the principles that underpin a democratic society.
The proposed misinformation bills, which would have incentivised excessive censorship without adequate safeguards for free expression.
The expansion of the eSafety Commissioner’s powers, raising concerns about transparency, accountability and overreach.
The rushed passage of privacy and social media legislation, with inadequate parliamentary scrutiny.
The introduction of criminal hate speech provisions that lower the threshold for liability and remove long-standing protections for legitimate public debate.
According to Dr Taylor, these examples suggest that governments may be adopting an increasingly protective stance that risks subordinating individual freedoms to collective interests.
Dr Paul Taylor is an Honorary Senior Lecturer in the T. C. Beirne School of Law, and Fellow of the Centre for Public, International and Comparative Law; Adjunct Professor at the School of Law, The University of Notre Dame Australia; and Fellow of the Higher Education Academy.
By cisresearchRecent Australian laws risk undermining fundamental freedoms and weakening the principles that underpin a democratic society.
The proposed misinformation bills, which would have incentivised excessive censorship without adequate safeguards for free expression.
The expansion of the eSafety Commissioner’s powers, raising concerns about transparency, accountability and overreach.
The rushed passage of privacy and social media legislation, with inadequate parliamentary scrutiny.
The introduction of criminal hate speech provisions that lower the threshold for liability and remove long-standing protections for legitimate public debate.
According to Dr Taylor, these examples suggest that governments may be adopting an increasingly protective stance that risks subordinating individual freedoms to collective interests.
Dr Paul Taylor is an Honorary Senior Lecturer in the T. C. Beirne School of Law, and Fellow of the Centre for Public, International and Comparative Law; Adjunct Professor at the School of Law, The University of Notre Dame Australia; and Fellow of the Higher Education Academy.