Beyond the Ban: Rethinking Digital Safeguarding for Children

Safeguarding Policy
Beyond the Ban: Rethinking Digital Safeguarding for Children
Published June 20, 2026
The proposal to restrict social media access for under-16s represents a watershed moment in child safeguarding policy. Rather than relying solely on parental controls and platform self-regulation, legislators are asserting that the state has a duty to limit the digital environments where young people might encounter exploitation, harmful content, or cyberbullying. For Lead Members and safeguarding partners in local government, this shift raises complex questions about statutory responsibilities, enforcement capabilities, and the balance between protection and a child's right to participate in digital society. While the safeguarding imperative is clear—creating safer online spaces—the practical implications for schools, youth services, and social care require careful navigation of digital inclusion and exclusion. Ultimately, this debate forces us to reconsider the relationship between childhood, technology, and the state's role in mediating it. As Westminster observes international developments, the challenge lies in crafting frameworks that secure children's wellbeing without compromising their digital literacy or severing vital support networks that increasingly operate online.
Share this article:

Comments (0)

Leave a Comment

Protected by Cloudflare

Related Articles

Jun 18, 2026

Tutors Demand Consultation on AI Rollout as DfE Explores New Technology

Tuition sector leaders are urging the Department for Education to engage with frontline professionals before deploying artificial intelligence tools in educational settings. The call highlights growing concerns about balancing technological innovation with the human interaction central to effective tutoring.

Jun 18, 2026

Calls Mount to Nationalise SATs Marking as Delays Persist

Delays in the marking of Key Stage 2 SATs have renewed calls for the nationalisation of the assessment process, with concerns growing over private contractors' ability to deliver timely results. Schools face mounting uncertainty as they await pupil scores, prompting serious debate over whether crucial national examinations should be brought back under direct government control.