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At-Risk Youth for Radicalization

Young people vulnerable to extremist recruitment due to marginalization, identity struggles, or grievances

7
Total Programs
Top Themes
Preventing Violent Extremism5
Social Cohesion & Peacebuilding3
Nutrition1
Infectious Disease Prevention1
Top Countries
Denmark1
United States (targeting global Somali diaspora)1
Global (270+ cities in 65+ countries)1
Austria (HQ), Global implementation in Pakistan, Tajikistan, Indonesia, Nigeria, Kashmir, and more1
Western Balkans (Bosnia, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Serbia), MENA (Tunisia, Lebanon, Iraq)1

Programs Targeting This Audience

Project Masiluleke - Mobile HIV/TB Testing Initiative

Project Masiluleke ("give wise counsel" in Zulu) was a pioneering mobile health initiative launched in 2009 in South Africa to combat HIV/AIDS and TB. The project sent approximately 1 million daily HIV/TB messages via the unused space in "Please Call Me" (PCM) text messages - a free SMS service. Messages were culturally relevant and in local languages, connecting users to the National AIDS Helpline. The program tripled call volumes to HIV helplines and piloted TxtAlert for antiretroviral therapy adherence reminders. Later phases explored virtual call centers staffed by HIV-positive "gold star" patients and at-home HIV testing with mobile support.

South Africa, Sub-Saharan AfricaInfectious Disease PreventionAt-Risk Youth for Radicalization
Infectious Disease Prevention
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Strong Cities Network Global P/CVE Initiative

The Strong Cities Network (SCN) is a global network of 270+ cities across 65+ countries addressing hate, extremism, and polarization at the local level. Launched at the UN in 2015 with support from US State Department, Denmark, and Norway, SCN is hosted by the Institute for Strategic Dialogue. The network facilitates knowledge-sharing through regional hubs and global summits, provides policy guides and training, and supports city-led prevention across three levels: primary (community resilience), secondary (targeted intervention for at-risk individuals), and tertiary (disengagement/reintegration). Notable city models include Aarhus (Denmark), Orlando (USA - police coaching youth sports), and Kacanik (Kosovo - reducing foreign fighter flow).

Global (270+ cities in 65+ countries), Multi-RegionalPreventing Violent Extremism, Social Cohesion & PeacebuildingAt-Risk Youth for Radicalization +1
Preventing Violent ExtremismSocial Cohesion & PeacebuildingCommunity Mobilization
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Aarhus Model - Denmark Deradicalization Program

The Aarhus Model is Denmarks pioneering multi-agency deradicalization program launched to prevent violent extremism through early intervention and reintegration rather than punishment. Key components include: InfoHouse (central intake for risk assessment), trained mentors (diverse in age/background) who guide at-risk individuals, school workshops on radicalization, a Parents Network for families of radicalized youth, ongoing dialogue with Muslim communities, and an Exit Programme for foreign fighters returning from conflict zones. Based on Life Psychology theory, the model achieved dramatic results: individuals traveling from Aarhus to Syria dropped from 31 (2013) to just 1 (2014). The approach has been adopted by the Strong Cities Network globally.

Denmark, EuropePreventing Violent Extremism, Social Cohesion & PeacebuildingAt-Risk Youth for Radicalization +1
Preventing Violent ExtremismSocial Cohesion & PeacebuildingInterpersonal Communication (IPC)Community Mobilization
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MotherSchools - Parenting for Peace

MotherSchools is a globally recognized program by Women without Borders that trains mothers as first-line defenders against youth radicalization. Based on research with 1,023 mothers across Pakistan, Palestine, Israel, Nigeria, and Northern Ireland, the model recognizes mothers central family role in detecting early warning signs. The program equips mothers with leadership skills, communication techniques, and knowledge of radicalization indicators. The SAVE (Sisters Against Violent Extremism) network extends this approach, and Mothers for Life connects parents whose children joined extremist groups across 12 countries (Canada, US, Germany, France, UK, Tunisia, etc.). Results show mothers become confident peace agents in their communities.

Austria (HQ), Global implementation in Pakistan, Tajikistan, Indonesia, Nigeria, Kashmir, and more, Multi-RegionalPreventing Violent ExtremismWomen of Reproductive Age +1
Preventing Violent ExtremismPeer EducationInterpersonal Communication (IPC)
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Average Mohamed Counter-Extremism Cartoons

Average Mohamed is a counter-extremism cartoon series created by Mohamed Ahmed, a Somali-American gas station manager in Minneapolis. The cartoons target youth aged 8-16 with messages of peace, democracy, and anti-extremism, using Islamic theology to rebut extremist interpretations. Ahmed voices the cheerful Average Mohamed character himself, producing low-budget videos (USD 1,000-3,000 each) that directly respond to ISIS and al-Shabaab propaganda. The series includes videos like Flames of Hell (rebutting ISISs Flames of War) and has reached hundreds of thousands via YouTube. Ahmed conducts outreach in schools, mosques, and madrasas across Minneapolis - a city that has seen more Americans attempt to join ISIS than any other US location.

United States (targeting global Somali diaspora), North America / Multi-RegionalPreventing Violent ExtremismAt-Risk Youth for Radicalization +2
Preventing Violent ExtremismCounter-Narrative Campaigns
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PAVE - Preventing Violent Extremism Balkans and MENA

PAVE (Preventing and Addressing Violent Extremism through Community Resilience) was a 3-year EU Horizon 2020 research project (2020-2023, EUR 3 million budget) involving 13 partners from 12 countries. The project conducted empirical studies in 7 countries (Bosnia, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Serbia, Tunisia, Lebanon, Iraq) to understand drivers of radicalization and community resilience factors. Four key themes: religious/political/ethnic extremism interfaces, religious-state institution interactions, online/offline narratives, and transnational influences. Outputs include an interactive risk map, vulnerability/resilience toolkit, open-access training modules, and policy guidelines for multi-stakeholder engagement in prevention.

Western Balkans (Bosnia, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Serbia), MENA (Tunisia, Lebanon, Iraq), Europe / Middle EastPreventing Violent Extremism, Social Cohesion & PeacebuildingCommunity Leaders +1
Preventing Violent ExtremismSocial Cohesion & Peacebuilding
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