TITLE:
From Screens to Statutes: Comparative Study on the Regulation of Cyberbullying through the Criminal Law of China and Cybercrime Act of Guyana
AUTHORS:
Aqilah Shakirah Shepherd, Chunhua Liu
KEYWORDS:
Cybercrime, Criminal Law, Cyberbullying, China, Guyana, Comparative Analysis
JOURNAL NAME:
Beijing Law Review,
Vol.15 No.4,
December
18,
2024
ABSTRACT: Cyberbullying has emerged as a major concern in today’s digital era and is often classified as a type of cybercrime. It jeopardizes digital spaces, contemporary societies, and legal systems. This review compares the legal frameworks governing cyberbullying in China and Guyana, emphasizing how China’s Criminal Law and Guyana’s cybercrime laws address the issue. While neither country has laws specifically criminalizing cyberbullying, both use general legal provisions related to defamation, harassment, privacy protection, coercion, intimidation, and humiliation. This study reveals key gaps in both legal frameworks, proposing that China adopt a unified cybercrime law explicitly criminalizing cyberbullying and that Guyana incorporate clear, targeted provisions for this offence. The paper contributes to the discourse by offering legal reform recommendations to combat cyberbullying in both countries.