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.

Filters

  • 24th March 2023
    Youths Challenging Violent Extremism through Digital Platforms in the Philippines
    Primitivo III Cabanes Ragandang
  • 22nd March 2023
    Granola Nazis: Digital Traditionalism, the Folkish Movement and the Normalisation of the Far-Right
    Catherine Tebaldi
  • 20th March 2023
    Frank James: The New York Subway Shooter’s Radical Discourse on Social Media
    Khalil Boughali
  • 16th March 2023
    Unpacking the Incelosphere: In-group Categorisation, Incel Purity, and Competition
    GNET Team
  • 15th March 2023
    Discourses of Violence in Incel Online Discussions After the Plymouth Shooting
    Emilia Lounela
  • 14th March 2023
    ‘Incels are shit-post kings’: incels’ perceptions of online forum content
    Sarah Daly
  • 13th March 2023
    Incel PR: The Rebranding of the Incel Community & the Role of Media and Academia
    Rutger Sjoerts
  • 10th March 2023
    Can ‘Cyberterrorism’ Really Exist in Africa?
    Alta Grobbelaar
  • 06th March 2023
    Soliciting Online Bayʿat: Pro-Islamic State Responses to Abu al-Hassan al-Hashimi al-Qurashi’s Death
    Meili Criezis and Mona Thakkar

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