'Social media risks outweigh benefit in under 16s'

Jake WallaceChannel Islands
News imageBBC Emily Jennings. She is wearing a red scarf and a dark jacket. She has long brown hair. She is standing in front of a blurred background of a playground. BBC
Emily Jennings promotes the benefit of play in children and adults

A childhood advocate from Jersey has said the risks of social media outweigh any benefits for people under 16 years old.

It follows the topic of a social media ban for people aged under 16 being debated by the youth assembly on Tuesday.

Childhood advocate and play champion Emily Jennings said it was important for people to carefully consider what children are allowed to access. "There are some benefits embedded within social media, but the risks are huge and far-reaching," she said.

In the UK, some experts and children's charities have warned against the idea of a complete social media ban.

Jennings, who has spoken about the importance of play in children at a series of talks during TEDx in St Helier, said that people could get "stuck on the semantics" of a social media ban.

'Our most vulnerable'

"I really try to advocate and promote and champion play," she said.

"My whole ethos is about what can we advocate for, what are the positive things we're advocating for.

"So taking a really intentional view of childhood, what are we choosing to put in the hands of our children?

"We're in an age where we've got everything. So it's impossible to have it all, so what are we choosing to give them?"

She said people needed to consider what they encouraged their children to do.

"So, whether social media is beneficial for childhood, I would probably say on a kind of risk-benefit analysis, I'd say that the risks are higher than the benefits," she said.

"Our most vulnerable are most vulnerable on a social media platform."

Campaign groups, including the NSPCC, have said a full ban on social media for under-16s risks "unintended consequences" and have called instead for stronger enforcement of existing child safety rules.

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