Social Media Ban for Children and Its Influencing Factors: Evidence from an Opinion Cross-Sectional Study in Greece
Petros Galanis, Aglaia Katsiroumpa, Ioannis MoisoglouSeveral countries have adopted a nationwide ban on social media access for children. Our aim was to investigate public opinion regarding the implementation of a social media ban for children, as well as the factors influencing these views. We measured agreement with the ban, information regarding its implementation, perceived need for additional measures, confidence in the effectiveness of the ban, perceived impact of the ban, and parental familiarity with digital parental control tools. The study sample included 619 participants. In our sample, 69% agreed with the implementation of the ban, while 86.5% believed that additional measures should be implemented (i.e., digital literacy courses in schools, active parental involvement in digital literacy, prohibition of inappropriate content, reasonable parental limits on social media use, and restriction of addictive platform features). Females and higher-educated participants had more positive perceptions regarding the impact of the ban. We found a positive association between age, financial status, social media use, and impact of the ban. Reduced age was associated with increased parental familiarity with digital parental control tools. Social media use was associated with parental familiarity with digital parental control tools. There is a need for holistic and evidence-informed policy frameworks that integrate regulatory measures, educational initiatives, and shared accountability among stakeholders.