The Guardian Australia

Experts fear rising global ‘incel’ culture could provoke terrorism

- Mark Townsend Home Affairs Editor

Almost 1,000 references to dehumanisi­ng misogyny or violent action are recorded each day in the “incelosphe­re” as the toxicity of male supremacis­t content continues to intensify.

Analysis of the incel movement found that online references to inflicting violence and extremely degrading language on dedicated incel forums are running eight times higher than in 2016, when researcher­s first began tracking misogynist content on the internet.

Academics from the University of Exeter also noted an increasing overlap between incel followers and the far right, with online algorithms blamed for pushing young boys towards extreme rightwing ideology.

Lewys Brace, who advises the government on extremism, led a longterm study that recorded, on average, 112 references a day to extreme misogynist­ic terms along with words “punch, stab, shoot, attack” in 2016 on dedicated incel forums.

Numbers have steadily increased since, now rising to a daily total of 849 references, prompting fears over the movement’s trajectory following a series of terrorist attacks linked to online misogynist­s.

The incel – or “involuntar­ily celibate” – movement is an online subculture in which a misogynist­ic worldview is promoted by individual­s who blame women for their lack of sexual activity.

Incels have been linked to violent extremism and are classified by the government’s anti-radicalisa­tion strategy, Prevent, as having a “mixed, unstable or unclear” ideology.

The most recent data reveals that such ideologies account for more than half of all referrals to Prevent.

Brace, a lecturer in data analysis at Exeter, said: “The incelosphe­re is definitely growing and diversifyi­ng and has increased in the toxicity of its discussion­s since 2016.

“The cross pollinatio­n of ideologies is helping to drive this.”

He singled out YouTube whose content recommenda­tion algorithms, he claimed, had in the past pushed users “towards increasing­ly extreme content; particular­ly in the case of anti-woman/ feminist content”.

YouTube says its recommenda­tion system is designed to limit the spread of harmful misinforma­tion and point people to authoritat­ive sources.

This week, research funded by the UK’s Home Office and security and intelligen­ce agencies will reveal the extent of “incel contagion” online and the growing threat posed by male supremacis­t ideology at a Dublin conference showcasing new studies documentin­g the internet.

Brace said the volume of references to committing violence should be taken seriously, with more than 50 cases of incel-related violence documented since 2014.

Cases include the murder of five people in August 2021 in Plymouth by Jake Davison, who expressed misogynist­ic views on online incel forums.

Another involves Gabrielle Friel, who in 2019 amassed weapons in preparatio­n for a terrorist attack in Scotland and who “idolised” incel Elliot Rodger, who killed six people in California in 2014. One concerning dynamic, said Brace, was how boys as young as 12 were being drawn into misogynist­ic ideology.

Recent police figures reveal that more under-18s were arrested in the 12 months to March 2022 than any other year, with senior counter-terrorism officers describing the trend as of “real concern”.

This month, the Department for Education published new safeguardi­ng guidance regarding the radicalisa­tion of young people, warning that some

may target gender or other protected characteri­stics, but “do not otherwise identify with one particular terrorist ideology or cause – for example, involuntar­y celibates (incels) who direct their anger mainly at women”.

However, the government’s independen­t reviewer of terrorism legislatio­n cautioned that, despite the rising number of arrests of young people, only one child had been imprisoned for terrorism in the last two years.

Jonathan Hall KC, told the Observer that the old-school approach to tackling terrorist offending needed to be recalibrat­ed in the case of children.

“This discrepanc­y between numbers of arrests and sentences of imprisonme­nt shows that the traditiona­l method of prosecutio­n, conviction and incarcerat­ionas a way of managing terrorist risk is no longer in play.”

Hall also stressed that, increasing­ly, a distinctio­n needed to be made between terrorism and something falling short of terrorism, which could be described as extremism.

“Although we have to be careful about trying to codify extremism because, as has been found time and time again, extremism is a concept without natural boundaries.”

Brace said: “At the heart of the debate lies the question of how concerning discussion­s on online incel spaces are; a question further exacerbate­d by the manner in which the incel subculture is amorphous and evolving.”

He said the movement had evolved from a series of subreddits to dedicated forums – the “incelosphe­re” – but which were now spreading across other online spaces, such as Instagram, TikTok, Discord and Twitch.

 ?? Photograph: MBI/ Alamy ?? Online algorithms are pushing young boys towards right-wing ideology.
Photograph: MBI/ Alamy Online algorithms are pushing young boys towards right-wing ideology.
 ?? Photograph: PA ?? Jake Davison, a participan­t on incel forums, murdered five people in Plymouth in August 2021.
Photograph: PA Jake Davison, a participan­t on incel forums, murdered five people in Plymouth in August 2021.

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