Young jihadis across continents are turning to violence – and that will continue whatever the new old rulers of Afghanistan choose to do
The inconvenient truth is that we don’t care enough about the victims of such attacks to tackle white supremacist terrorism
There are fears that racist occultist groups, such as the Order of Nine Angles, are moving from online recruiting to real-life murder.
The rise of right-wing violence coincided with the rise in popularity of right-wing populist parties in the West European democracies.
Managing Jihadi paranoia represents one of the main challenges faced by our political and academic systems.
A new group of neo-Nazis is rising, and they might be getting ready for violence.
Finally, there is a dataset documenting response to white supremacist violence in the US.
We still have fundamental gaps in our understanding of the radical right and effective policy responses to counter it.
The central question that politics, security authorities and society are still failing to answer: who will protect us from right-wing terrorism?
Manifestos and livestreaming seem to be the new trend in radical right terrorist attacks.
How should one respond to terrorism carried out in one’s name?
Given the terrible injustices endured by so many, why aren’t more turning to terrorism?