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Cybersecurity policy adoption in South Africa: Does public trust matter?

Published: December 11, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2512.11122v1

By: Mbali Nkosi, Mike Nkongolo

Potential Business Impact:

Builds trust to make online safety rules work.

Business Areas:
Security Privacy and Security

This study examines how public perception influences the implementation and adoption of cybersecurity frameworks in South Africa. Using the PRISMA methodology, a systematic literature review was conducted across reputable scholarly databases, yielding 34 relevant sources aligned with predefined inclusion criteria. Cybersecurity, governance, trust, privacy, cybercrime, and public opinion emerged as dominant thematic clusters. Bibliometric and thematic analyses, supported by network visualisations, revealed that while trust and public sentiment affect cybersecurity policy adoption globally, these factors have minimal influence within the South African policy landscape, despite the country's high cybercrime prevalence. In response, the study proposes a trust-centric policymaking framework designed to integrate public perception as a proactive dimension of cybersecurity governance. This framework seeks to prevent trust deficits from obstructing policy effectiveness and provides guidance for restoring trust where it has eroded.

Country of Origin
πŸ‡ΏπŸ‡¦ South Africa

Page Count
21 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Cryptography and Security