Civil society’s role in constitutionalising global content governance

This article examines global content governance on social media platforms through the lens of digital constitutionalism, which explores how fundamental rights can be embedded within the socio-technical architecture of digital technologies. It highlights the often-overlooked role of civil society in...

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Published in:Internet Policy Review
Main Authors: Nicola Palladino, Dennis Redeker, Edoardo Celeste
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society 2025-03-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://policyreview.info/node/1830
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author Nicola Palladino
Dennis Redeker
Edoardo Celeste
author_facet Nicola Palladino
Dennis Redeker
Edoardo Celeste
author_sort Nicola Palladino
collection DOAJ
container_title Internet Policy Review
description This article examines global content governance on social media platforms through the lens of digital constitutionalism, which explores how fundamental rights can be embedded within the socio-technical architecture of digital technologies. It highlights the often-overlooked role of civil society in articulating digital rights and principles. In addition to performing a watchdog function and raising awareness about the human rights implications of digital technologies, we argue that civil society organisations play a constitutionalising role, acting as a bridge between international human rights law and platform governance. Above all, by engaging in global conversations, civil society organisations may facilitate the emergence and dissemination of a set of shared principles and rules. By conducting a semantic network analysis on 44 digital bills of rights that were drafted by civil society organisations and addressed content governance issues, the article aims to identify emerging principles as well as to study their alignment with human rights standards, their relationships, and evolution over time. The findings highlight how civil society initiatives have effectively led to a convergence of expectations around a common set of principles for content moderation, which could both pressure and support platforms and policymakers to strike a balance between freedom of expression and protecting people and democratic institutions from harm and disinformation.
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spelling doaj-art-5faea0b83ed34236bb3506a2c2dfd4ce2025-08-20T01:51:36ZengAlexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and SocietyInternet Policy Review2197-67752025-03-0114110.14763/2025.1.1830Civil society’s role in constitutionalising global content governanceNicola Palladino0Dennis Redeker1Edoardo Celeste2University of SalernoUniversity of BremenDublin City UniversityThis article examines global content governance on social media platforms through the lens of digital constitutionalism, which explores how fundamental rights can be embedded within the socio-technical architecture of digital technologies. It highlights the often-overlooked role of civil society in articulating digital rights and principles. In addition to performing a watchdog function and raising awareness about the human rights implications of digital technologies, we argue that civil society organisations play a constitutionalising role, acting as a bridge between international human rights law and platform governance. Above all, by engaging in global conversations, civil society organisations may facilitate the emergence and dissemination of a set of shared principles and rules. By conducting a semantic network analysis on 44 digital bills of rights that were drafted by civil society organisations and addressed content governance issues, the article aims to identify emerging principles as well as to study their alignment with human rights standards, their relationships, and evolution over time. The findings highlight how civil society initiatives have effectively led to a convergence of expectations around a common set of principles for content moderation, which could both pressure and support platforms and policymakers to strike a balance between freedom of expression and protecting people and democratic institutions from harm and disinformation.https://policyreview.info/node/1830GovernanceDigital constitutionalismCivil societyNetwork analysis
spellingShingle Nicola Palladino
Dennis Redeker
Edoardo Celeste
Civil society’s role in constitutionalising global content governance
Governance
Digital constitutionalism
Civil society
Network analysis
title Civil society’s role in constitutionalising global content governance
title_full Civil society’s role in constitutionalising global content governance
title_fullStr Civil society’s role in constitutionalising global content governance
title_full_unstemmed Civil society’s role in constitutionalising global content governance
title_short Civil society’s role in constitutionalising global content governance
title_sort civil society s role in constitutionalising global content governance
topic Governance
Digital constitutionalism
Civil society
Network analysis
url https://policyreview.info/node/1830
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