Contextual
Resources

Once a government or tech company develops a definition of terrorism or violent extremism, it can be difficult to know how to apply these definitions to the variety of ways that terrorism and violent extremism manifests internationally and across online spaces.

This section of the site aims to highlight contextual resources on themes related to applying definitions to the online space.  GIFCT funds the Global Network on Extremism and Technology (GNET) to bring forward actionable insights from experts and practitioners around the world to better inform and give context to tech companies, governments, practitioners and other stakeholders in this field. Insights are curated here under context-based themes.

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Regional Trends

While experts can point to overarching global trends in terrorism and violent extremism, we also know that there are significant regional and country-based variables in how these groups recruit, mobilize, propagandize, and coordinate attacks. There are also varying international trends in the types of platforms terrorists and violent extremists use in different parts of the world, their overarching aims and the ways their aims manifest online. GNET includes expert insights from academics and practitioners all over the world, feeding in the nuances and adversarial shifts they report on.

North America

Across North America, insights aid in contextualizing violent extremism online in both regional and country specific ways. Relevant research has focused on the Canadian context regarding far-right radicalization on particular platforms such as Reddit, and the country’s recent ban of far-right extremist groups . Additionally in the North American context, research covers wide issues ranging from the particularity of the American interest in Global Jihad, in-depth examinations of the Denver shooter’s ideological views, to the analysis of post-Buffalo online trends.

  • 06th January 2023
    Shifts in Domestic Extremist Movement Rhetoric, Two Years After the Capitol Siege 
    Ilana Krill and Valeria de la Fuente
  • 04th January 2023
    Far-Right Factions And Threats After the United States Midterm Elections
    Pete Kurtz-Glovas
  • 19th August 2022
    How QAnon is Dealing With The FBI Raid on Trump
    Mike Rains
  • 03rd August 2022
    Mass Shooterism and the Need for Online Interventions and Bystander Resources
    Moonshot Team
  • 28th July 2022
    The Writing on the (Facebook) Wall: A Revised Assessment of Posting and Support for Violence by Pro-Rittenhouse Meme Creators
    Hampton Stall and Hari Prasad
  • 13th July 2022
    Ideological Nihilism and Aesthetic Violence: Mass Shooters and Online Antisocial Subcultures
    Simon Purdue
  • 01st July 2022
    The Buffalo Attack – Insights From the Suspected Terrorist’s Diary
    Laurence Bindner and Raphael Gluck
  • 17th May 2022
    Deflection and Denial Following the Buffalo Terror Attack
    Sara Aniano
  • 05th April 2022
    From Orange to Red: An Assessment of the Dark MAGA Trend in Far-Right Online Spaces
    Hampton Stall and Daniel Grober

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