Why taking a scorched-earth approach to social media companies won’t win the war on terror. This article first appeared in the LexisNexis Rule of Law Digest in December 2019 (Volume 8, Issue 2).
Why Businesses Hold the Key to Stemming the Tide of Radicalization Mathew Sweeny spoke to Nicole about radicalisation and the Info Ops HQ report into Australian Foreign Fighters in this piece …
PVE answers from the grave: what extremists hope to achieve in life, they fail through death Core to Islamic extremists beliefs is that Allah approves of jihad; and should a warrior die as a result of …
4 minutes in North Korea During the Korean Summer of 2014, I boarded an early morning bus at Camp Kim USO in Yongsan, Seoul and …
The Australian Crime Terror Nexus My latest article for Security Solutions Magazine explores the crime-terror terrain in Australia. Australian civil-military think tank Info Ops HQ recently published …
The Content Wars: my article for ‘NATO Review’ This article was first published by NATO’s Review Magazine and is republished here with permission. Content Wars: Daesh’s sophisticated use …
3 things Anthony Robbins reminded me about communication One of the things I love most about social media is the way new ideas and information can serendipitously cross …
The Hypocrisy of Hope: is radicalisation a form of addiction? LONG READ As the Australian Government brings forth legislation to detain high risk individuals indefinitely, I take a look at …
Information Wars: Fighting Words with Action “In the most simplistic of ways, Canada just started the West’s most effective countering violent extremism (CVE) narrative – with …