Abstract

This is a reply to a critique by Botha and Govindjee (2017 PELJ 1-32) of our interpretation of the hate speech provisions of the Equality Act (Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act 4 of 2000) in Marais and Pretorius (2015 PELJ 901-942), in which we considered the constitutionality of section 10(1) of the Act, amongst other things. We address Botha and Govindjees' rejection of our view that hate speech is a form of unfair discrimination and that the most appropriate constitutional framework within which section 10(1) should be interpreted and assessed is sections 9 and 10 of the Constitution. We consider Botha and Govindjees' rejection of this point of departure, their opposing different interpretation of the role of the proviso in section 12 of the Act and, generally, their reasons for concluding that section 10(1) is unconstitutional. We maintain that Botha and Govindjee's proposals for reform unduly restrict the hate speech prohibition to cover exclusively expression that warrants criminalisation. In doing so, they fail to fully acknowledge the transformative obligation in terms of international law, the Constitution and the Equality Act, to prohibit and prevent unfair discrimination.
 

Highlights

  • Hate speech remains an important and contentious issue in South Africa and elsewhere

  • This is a reply to a critique by Botha and Govindjee (2017 PELJ 1-32) of our interpretation of the hate speech provisions of the Equality Act (Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act 4 of 2000) in Marais and Pretorius (2015 PELJ 901-942), in which we considered the constitutionality of section 10(1) of the Act, amongst other things

  • It is important because hate speech directly implicates the foundational values of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996. It is contentious because the regulation of hate speech has to reconcile deep tensions in relation to human dignity in the sense of autonomy and as a right to be respected by others, in relation to freedom of expression as a contributor to the realisation of equality and as potentially instrumental to its violation, and in relation to freedom of expression as both an essential ingredient of, as well as a potential threat to deliberative democracy

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Summary

May 2019

How to cite this article Marais ME and Pretorius JL "The Constitutionality of the Prohibition of Hate Speech in terms of Section 10(1) of the Equality Act: A Reply to Botha and Govindjee" PER / PELJ 2019(22) - DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/17273781/2019/v22i0a5718

Introduction
The link between unfair discrimination and hate speech
Different tests for hate speech and unfair discrimination in terms of the Act
Section 15 of the Act
Different harms associated with unfair discrimination and hate speech
69 CERD General Recommendation No 35
The constitutional framework
Vagueness and overreach
The function of the proviso103 in the context of section 10 of the Act
The textual reading
Conclusion
Literature
Full Text
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