Hate Speech in the Equality Act Following the Constitutional Court Judgment in Qwelane v SAHRC

Marelize Marais
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Abstract

In its judgment in Qwelane v South African Human Rights Commission 2022 2 BCLR 129 (CC), the Constitutional Court declared section 10(1) of the Equality Act unconstitutional and invalid to the narrow extent that section 10(1)(a) refers to the intention to be "hurtful". The prohibition on hate speech passed constitutional muster in all other respects. In addition, the court purposively interpreted aspects of the application of section 10(1) so as to limit its impact on the right to freedom of expression. This contribution firstly welcomes the court's reliance on the transformative goals of the Constitution and the Equality Act as its primary framework in interpreting section 10(1). The severance of section 10(1)(a) and the conjunctive reading of sections 10(1)(b) and (c) ("be harmful or to incite harm" and ʺpromote or propagate hatred" respectively) also seem sensible considering the court's broad definition of "harm". The article further emphasises that the terms of section 10 call for a proper consideration of context. In this regard, the court rightly considered the extreme homophobia in the society addressed by Mr Qwelane, the particular vulnerability of the target group and the real threat of devastating imminent consequences to conclude that Qwelane's words were clearly intended to "incite harm" and "propagate hatred". Yet the court's view that the speaker's subjective intention is irrelevant in performing the requisite objective reasonableness assessment from the ambit of section 10(1) is arguably less judicious, as is the categorical exclusion of expression in private. Ultimately, the objective case-by-case reasonableness inquiry under section 10(1) should be whether a reasonable person in the speaker's position should have refrained from making the impugned harmful discriminatory utterances. This inquiry involves a determination of wrongfulness based on the constitutional duty not to discriminate unfairly. It invokes all the aspects of the Equality Act's definition of discrimination as well as all the elements of fairness analysis set out in section 14 of the Equality Act. Factors to be considered include the value of the particular expression, and the extent of the (potential) harm to individual members of a protected group and to society as a whole, as well as justification considerations such as the respondent's legitimate and bona fide exercise of the right to freedom of expression and to privacy.
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宪法法院对Qwelane诉SAHRC案判决后平等法中的仇恨言论
在Qwelane诉南非人权委员会2022 2 BCLR 129 (CC)一案的判决中,宪法法院宣布《平等法》第10(1)条违宪,并且在第10(1)(a)条提及“伤害”意图的狭窄范围内无效。禁止仇恨言论在所有其他方面都通过了宪法的审查。此外,法院有目的地解释了第10(1)条适用的各个方面,以限制其对言论自由权的影响。这篇文章首先欢迎最高法院将《宪法》和《平等法》的变革目标作为其解释第10(1)条的主要框架。考虑到法院对“伤害”的广泛定义,将第10(1)(a)条的分离和第10(1)(b)条和第10(1)(c)条的合并解读(分别为“有害或煽动伤害”和“促进或传播仇恨”)似乎也是明智的。该条进一步强调,第10款的条款要求适当考虑上下文。在这方面,法院正确地考虑了Qwelane先生所谈到的社会中极端的同性恋恐惧症,目标群体的特别脆弱性以及毁灭性后果迫在眉睫的真正威胁,从而得出结论,Qwelane的言论显然是为了“煽动伤害”和“传播仇恨”。然而,法院认为说话人的主观意图与根据第10(1)条的范围进行必要的客观合理性评估无关,这一观点可以说不太明智,就像对私下表达的绝对排除一样。最终,根据第10(1)条进行的客观的逐案合理性调查应该是,处于说话人立场的理性人是否应该避免发表被指责的有害歧视性言论。这项调查涉及根据不进行不公平歧视的宪法义务确定是否违法。它援引了《平等法》对歧视定义的所有方面,以及《平等法》第14节所载的公平分析的所有要素。需要考虑的因素包括特定表达的价值,以及对受保护群体的个人成员和整个社会的(潜在)伤害程度,以及证明理由的考虑,例如被申请人合法和善意地行使表达自由权和隐私权。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
67
审稿时长
24 weeks
期刊介绍: PELJ/PER publishes contributions relevant to development in the South African constitutional state. This means that most contributions will concern some aspect of constitutionalism or legal development. The fact that the South African constitutional state is the focus, does not limit the content of PELJ/PER to the South African legal system, since development law and constitutionalism are excellent themes for comparative work. Contributions on any aspect or discipline of the law from any part of the world are thus welcomed.
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