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

  • 02nd February 2021
    Singapore: The Lure of the Far-Right
    Dr. Shashi Jayakumar
  • 01st February 2021
    Jihadists at Play
    Dr. Aaron Tugendhaft
  • 28th January 2021
    3D-Printed Gun Laws: Girding for the Future of Terrorism
    Muhammad Faizal Abdul Rahman
  • 27th January 2021
    From MAGA to the Fringe: What Was Happening Online Before the 6 January Insurrection and What Can We Do Now?
    Meili Criezis, Brad Galloway
  • 26th January 2021
    Researching the Far-Right in a World on Pause: An Overview of Secondary, Public and Archival Data Sources
    Peita Richards
  • 26th January 2021
    Turner Diaries: Defining a Movement
    Brad Galloway
  • 22nd January 2021
    Extremism in the Manosphere During the Presidential Transition
    Dr. Alexis Henshaw
  • 21st January 2021
    “Take Nothing But Pictures, Leave Nothing But (Digital) Footprints”: Social Media Evidence From the US Capitol Siege Perpetrators
    Jonathan Lewis, Bennett Clifford
  • 21st January 2021
    Alt-Tech and Online Organising After the Capitol Riots
    Jordan McSwiney, Greta Jasser, Dominik Hammer

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