Journal Discrimination and Injustice
Vol. 1 No. 2 December (2025)

Structural Discrimination in Online Defamation Enforcement: A Hybrid Analysis of Malaysian Criminal Law and Islamic Jurisprudence

Abdul Basir Mohamad (Research Centre for Shariah, Faculty of Islamic Studies, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM), Malaysia)
Nurbazla Ismail (Research Centre for Shariah, Faculty of Islamic Studies, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM), Malaysia)



Article Info

Publish Date
27 Dec 2025

Abstract

Online defamation in Malaysia reveals not only legal and technological challenges but also entrenched structural inequalities embedded within Criminal Law enforcement. Marginalized groups particularly individuals with low socio-economic status, minority identities, and limited digital or legal literacy face substantial obstacles in pursuing justice, while those with political or social influence tend to receive disproportionately rapid institutional responses. This study examines how discriminatory patterns emerge within Malaysia’s online defamation framework and evaluates Islamic jurisprudence as a normative alternative capable of shaping a more equitable liability structure. Employing a qualitative doctrinal and socio-legal methodology, the article analyzes statutory provisions, judicial decisions, regulatory instruments governing digital communication, and classical Islamic legal sources, complemented by thematic content analysis. The findings indicate that current liability arrangements, including broad immunities for digital intermediaries, reinforce systemic disadvantages by shifting the burden of proof and pursuit entirely onto victims, thereby privileging corporate actors and technologically empowered offenders. In contrast, Islamic legal principles such as hifz al-‘ird (protection of dignity) and tabayyun (verification) offer a proportional, intent-based, and dignity-centered framework for assigning responsibility. The study ultimately proposes a hybrid reform model integrating contemporary Criminal Law with Islamic jurisprudence to reduce structural discrimination, strengthen victim-centered protections, and enhance substantive justice in the digital environment.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

jdi

Publisher

Subject

Religion Humanities Law, Crime, Criminology & Criminal Justice Social Sciences Other

Description

Journal Discrimination and Injustice aims to advance scientific research on various forms of discrimination and injustice that affect individuals and groups based on legal status race religion ethnicity gender sexual orientation and other social factors. The journal seeks to create a robust academic ...