High-level summit at the University of Bergen: Global counter-terrorism after 22 July

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What can society and global organizations do better to stop right-wing extremist radicalization and terrorist content online?

Norway’s darkest day destroyed lives and local communities. The terrorist attack also raised acute questions about online radicalization and destructive lone actors motivated by right-wing radical extremism.

- 10 years after 22 July 2011, there is a need to lift the effort against right-wing extremist terrorism to a global level. The discussion is no longer simply about the terrorist Anders Behring Breivik, but about a number of actions by broadband terrorists and lone wolves, some of them directly inspired by him, says Professor Erik Tonning of the University of Bergen.

An international summit

On 25-27 August 2021, four research groups at the University of Bergen are hosting an international summit on this topic in collaboration with the peacebuilding Khalifa Ihler Institute, and the British expert group Center for Analysis of the Radical Right. They have brought together representatives from academia and civil society, Norway’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the governments of New Zealand, the United States and the United Kingdom, technology giants Google, Microsoft, Facebook and Twitter, UN agencies, European Commission security advisers, expert groups, and a number of other organizations involved in the fight against terrorism.

- The best way to remember the cruel and tragic attack in Norway ten years ago is to jointly commit to further work to stop extremist radicalization and terrorist content online, Tonning says.

How is it possible to prevent terrorist manifestos from spreading online, or for terrorist groups to communicate freely there? What practical and ethical challenges does this entail? How should we deal with these in line with the principles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights?


A firm commitment to change

Through the three-day discussion forum, the organizers seek to build on existing frameworks and international cooperation. The forum will be based on the Christchurch Call to Eliminate Terrorist and Violent Extremist Content Online, an initiative where Norway is one of the founding nations, issued in the wake of the attack that murdered 51 innocent people in New Zealand in 2019.

- We have gathered global stakeholders at a high level who can make the big decisions in this area and contribute resources to follow them up, Tonning says.

The goal is to establish completely new mechanisms to counter the spread of harmful material online and the global effect of local terrorist attacks.

A working programme outlining a basis for future collaboration will be presented during the press conference on 27 August.

Press conference

The sessions on 25 August (14: 00-19: 30 CET), as well as the summary and closing press conference on 27 August from 17.00 CET will be streamed live.

On 25 August, streaming from the University Aula will be accessible via UiB’s website www.uib.no.

On 27 August this link will be used, which requires pre-registration:

https://uib.zoom.us/meeting/register/u50rd-CurzwiGNPoI3uPsjsqEL-8PTptGp9i

For more information or to schedule interviews with participants, please contact erik.tonning@uib.no, or info@khalifaihler.org

The global stakeholders will be represented in the press conference. The focus will be on what can emerge from these discussions in the form of a specific programme of work and funding. The organizers intend this forum will live on as a focus for this work, and it is hoped that the University of Bergen will be able to host it again.

Website with full program and review:

https://www.uib.no/hf/146954/22-july-2011-ten-commemoration-and-commitment

Newsweek pre-event article:

https://www.newsweek.com/anders-breivik-attack-survivors-warn-manifesto-doing-harm-10-years-social-media-1620473

This press release was originally published by the University of Bergen here. And can be found in Norwegian here.

CT/CVEBjorn Ihler