Hybrid Extremism and Nihilistic Violence
Society is increasingly threatened by a ‘hybridised’ extremism landscape, in which individuals are radicalised through online ecosystems rather than specific ideologies. An example of this is found in the relatively recent phenomenon of nihilistic violence, which ISD defines as violent acts lacking an ideological motivation and driven by a misanthropic worldview.
Our research has linked nihilistic subcultures – including the mass murderer worshipping True Crime Community and the pseudo-Satanic No Lives Matter – to several mass attacks in 2024 and 2025. While these attacks bear many of the same overt characteristics of extremist violence, they lack a political or ideological dimension, which can often make them harder to categorise and track.
Further Reading
December 29, 2020
Amarnath Amarasingam on the ability of some conspiracy theories to mitigate violent mobilisation
Democratic Integrity, Hybrid Extremism and Nihilistic Violence, Terrorism and Extremism
November 26, 2020
Think globally, attack locally: How online extremism adapted to the Western Balkans
Hybrid Extremism and Nihilistic Violence, Terrorism and Extremism
September 8, 2020
Click reveals ISD discovery of huge pro-ISIS online cache
Hybrid Extremism and Nihilistic Violence, Islamist Extremism, Terrorism and Extremism
