A/77/512
opportunities, technical skills and family support; alienation; and dysfunctional
family relationships.
55. In the literature on the psychology of extremism, a broad consensus has emerged
that social situational factors – not personal traits – determine extremist behaviour.
Factors such as social identity formation, acculturation, social influence and normative
pressure from group membership strongly affect psychologically vulnerable
individuals. Social networks can determine individual choices, including whether to
engage in pro- or antisocial behaviour. Studies show that young people’s motives to
join hate groups are not primarily ideological or political. They were linked rather to
social and emotional reasons and the search for affiliation, protection,
acknowledgement and adventure.
56. In several studies examining non-ideological risk factors, former neo-Nazis or
white supremacists who predominantly joined hate groups as children reported
experiencing one or more of the following adverse environmental conditions:
childhood physical abuse, childhood or adolescent sexual abuse, emotional and
physical neglect, parental incarceration, parental abandonment, the witnessing of
serious violence (domestic and/or neighbourhood) and/or family disruption (for
example, divorced or deceased parents). Several psychological studies have shown
that events of this sort may contribute to an increased likelihood of neo-Nazi and
related extremist radicalization.
57. The above-mentioned factors help explain the circumstances of youth
recruitment, but should by no means be understood to excuse or exonerate extremism
and those who participate in neo-Nazi and related supremacist activities. Today,
sociologists generally approach neo-Nazi and related movements as social
movements that bring together those sharing a common ideology. Movements
committed to racist and xenophobic ideology exploit the psychological and
socioenvironmental factors described above to successfully target youth.
58. As elucidated in the report of the Special Rapporteur to the forty-first session of
the Human Rights Council (A/HRC/41/55), information and data available about the
implication of young people in violent extremism mainly focuses on Islamist
extremism. Very little information is available about counter-extremism programmes
focusing on far-right or neo-Nazi extremism. Despite the rise in neo-Nazi and white
supremacist extremism, only a few States in the European region and North America
have addressed radicalization and recruitment by hate groups in national strategies to
counter terrorism, which are largely focused on Islamist extremism.
E.
Upsurge in antisemitism in Europe and North America
59. The contemporary strengthening of neo-Nazism, as described above, has had
grave social consequences, including violent acts by groups connected to this
movement and who share related ideologies of racial superiority and hatred. In Europe
and North America especially, there have been dramatic increases in antisemitic
incidents tied to neo-Nazi groups and affiliated white supremacist and white
nationalist groups. Incidents of violence were perpetrated in countries across Europe
and beyond. Contemporary iterations of Nazi ideology have grown in their traditional
strongholds and in some cases expanded beyond them, posing a threat to racial
equality in different parts of the world.
60. The upsurge in antisemitism preceded the COVID-19 pandemic, but such
disturbing patterns intersected with the general trend whereby discussion of the origin
and propagation of COVID-19 became a vector for various forms of hatred. As
highlighted in the report of the Special Rapporteur to the seventy-fifth session of the
General Assembly (A/75/329), global antisemitic rhetoric online and offline falsely
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