USAID Supported Initiatives to Counter Violent Extremism
U.S. State Department and USAID Supported Initiatives to Counter Violent Extremism
Fact
Sheet
Office of the Spokesperson
Washington,
DC
February 19, 2015
Countering the violent extremism that is driving today’s terrorist threats and stemming its spread is a generational challenge. Lasting victories over terrorism and the violent extremist ideologies that underpin it are not found on the battlefield, but rather in mindsets, and within communities, schools, and families. The U.S. Department of State and U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) are committed to countering today’s threats, and building capacity and resilience to prevent tomorrow’s challenges. Together with international partners, including governments, the United Nations, regional organizations, civil society, and the private sector, the United States is helping prevent the spread of violent extremist ideologies and networks worldwide.
The U.S. Department of State and USAID are supporting a wide range of programs and other initiatives to advance the themes of the White House Summit on Countering Violent Extremism (CVE), with particular attention to topics discussed during the February 19 ministerial meeting at the Department of State. The United States will continue to advance ongoing and planned CVE efforts through robust programming and coordinated implementation described herein totaling approximately $188 million.
1) Improving and Sharing Analysis of Violent Extremism
• In
Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia, ongoing programs
focus on strengthening understanding of the local drivers of
violent extremism. This includes research and trend analysis
that focuses on gender and governance through “Regional
Violent Risk Assessments” in Cameroon, Chad, Kenya, Niger,
Nigeria, Somalia, and Uganda. The United States is also
supporting civil society practitioners and partner
governments to share the latest research on CVE through
workshops, online trainings, and in practice.
2)
Developing Skills, Expertise, and Strategies to Counter
Violent Extremism
• Efforts in West Africa,
working with the Economic Community of West Africa and in
the Horn of Africa, working with the Inter-Governmental
Authority on Development, focus on developing national,
multi-stakeholder strategies to address violent extremism.
This includes providing and supporting trainings and
exchanges of best practices among government practitioners
and civil society leaders.
• New initiatives in North
Africa and the Sahel will build capacity among community and
government leaders to counter violent extremism locally with
a variety of tools, including counter-messaging strategies.
These efforts will help partners amplify and build networks
of credible, independent, non-violent voices to build
resistance to violent extremists’ efforts, challenge the
appeal of violent extremist narratives, and to promote
tolerance in local communities around the
world.
3) Promoting the Role of Civil Society
Leaders, Especially Youth and Women, in Countering and
Preventing Violent Extremism
• Assistance for
projects that build the resilience of youth susceptible to
recruitment and radicalization to violent extremism provide
youth a sense of belonging. This includes projects that
focus on building technical skills and providing vocational
training, as well as offering opportunities for civic
engagement and leadership training.
• Support for
activities that build networks of youth, women, civil
society, and private sector leaders who can provide
counter-narratives and counter-messaging through
community-based efforts, the arts and media, sports, and
culture.
• Support for CVE projects for women,
including helping women assess signs of recruitment and
radicalization to violent extremism in their families and
communities, and extending support to women’s
organizations that develop prevention strategies and
promising CVE activities. Programs seek to create safe
spaces for dialogue between women community leaders and law
enforcement, promoting community cohesion and
community-based solutions to security concerns.
• In
partnership with the Institute for Strategic Dialogue’s
Women and Extremism Initiative, convene CVE experts for a
high-level “Women and Extremism” event in Washington,
D.C., with a follow-on exchange program to build a network
of researchers and practitioners that focuses on the role of
women in CVE.
• Organizing a series of educational and
cultural exchange projects and alumni projects on
CVE-related themes, including interfaith dialogue, tolerance
and diversity, minority integration, community service,
outreach to at-risk youth, encouraging responsible
citizenship and democratic participation, private and
charitable sector engagements, and promoting peace and
security. These efforts will build a global network of youth
who are working in their own community to counter violent
extremism to share experiences, good practices, and support
each other to expand collective impact against violent
extremism.
• Supporting economic opportunity for women
and youth through innovation and entrepreneurship training
and mentorship, such as the Global Innovation through
Science and Technology (GIST) program. GIST uses startup
boot camps, interactive webinars, global competitions, and
an online network to deliver programing that includes
training, mentorship, peer-to-peer support, and access to
financing. In November 2014, GIST launchedwww.GISTnetwork.org which is an online
marketplace that allows technology entrepreneurs from across
the globe to find mentors, share information, and solicit
investments. GIST Net is a public-private partnership
developed by the State Department and actively seeks the
participation of women and encourages participants to share
knowledge and pay forward success. For example, in Jordan,
over half the 30 startup boot camp participants – and the
winners – were women innovators.
• Investments in
science, technology, education, and math (STEM) education,
through the NeXXt Scholars Program, which provides young
women from 47 Muslim-majority countries, alongside their
American counterparts, with professional development,
leadership and intercultural communication training, and
mentoring, while studying STEM at 38 U.S. women’s
colleges. Support for STEM education to young women in
volatile regions can advance women’s empowerment and boost
a country’s enhanced economic development and growth. To
date, this initiative has involved 73 NeXXt Scholars from
countries including Nigeria, Bangladesh, and
Pakistan.
4) Strengthening Community-Police and
Community-Security Force Relations as Ingredients for
Countering and Preventing the Spread of Violent
Extremism
• Support for community-oriented
policing and community engagement projects to counter and
prevent recruitment and radicalization in the Balkans, South
Asia, the Horn of Africa, and the Sahel offer professional
and cultural competency training to local law enforcement,
and encourage engagement with vulnerable communities,
emphasizing relationship and trust-building activities as
well as communal problem solving. These projects support the
implementation of the Global Counter Terrorism Forum’s
(GCTF) Good Practices on Community Engagement and
Community-Oriented Policing as Tools to Counter Violent
Extremism.
• The creation of an expert-led
technical working group to study the relationship between
security force-community relations and the prevalence of
violent extremism will engage civil society, government, and
multilateral partners. The group will develop a set of
principles and recommendations for practitioners, public
officials, and civil society, by examining common practice,
empirical research, and case studies.
5) Building
Community Resilience to Recruitment and Radicalization to
Violent Extremism
• Ongoing efforts to build
community resilience to recruitment and radicalization to
violent extremism include projects to promote inclusive
peace and reconciliation and encourage tolerance and respect
of religious minorities. Continuing activities include
dialogue across religious, sectarian, and ethnic lines,
conflict resolution training, and working with community
leaders and members to peacefully resolve problems
together.
• Projects to build resilience among youth
susceptible to recruitment and radicalization to violent
extremism include encouraging youth to be catalysts for
inter- and intra-faith cooperation in their communities, and
enabling youth to become active advocates by providing
technical skills and training, as well as offering
opportunities for civic education, community service, and
empowerment.
• Provision of support services to
low-risk offenders, coupled with the strengthening of public
and youth-serving organizations that offer positive
alternatives to violence. Services include life skills
training, internships, employment placements, and
entrepreneurship training to help prevent youth delinquency
and reduce recidivism.
6) Promoting
Counter-Narratives, including through Strategic
Communications
• Expansion of innovative
public diplomacy efforts to support counter-narratives and
counter-messaging to mitigate recruitment and radicalization
to violent extremism in key countries through social media
and other information technologies and
platforms.
• Support for alternative narratives and
counter-messaging efforts that include: 1) amplifying the
voices of victims/survivors of terrorism and former violent
extremists and training them on ways to broadcast their
message; 2) emphasizing the negative impact of violent
extremism on families and communities; and 3) utilizing
widely accessible technologies such as the internet,
smartphones, radio, television, and SMS for maximum message
dissemination to vulnerable communities.
• Support for
a series of online media training programs and “tech
camps.” The U.S., in partnership with governments and
private sector organizations, will help mobilize people to
actively and vigorously contest ISIL’s online activities.
The media/tech camps will provide training and knit together
influential community and religious leaders to enhance their
use of technology to more effectively counter ISIL’s
narrative and propaganda.
7) Elevating the Role
of Religious Voices and Promoting Educational Initiatives to
Build Resilience against Extremist
Recruitment
• Support to amplify non-violent
religious voices will: 1) mobilize religious leaders from
conflict areas and encourage them to lead projects
emphasizing peace, tolerance and coexistence at the
community level; and 2) train religious leaders on conflict
resolution and implementation of peace-building
initiatives.
• Coordination of a meeting of religious
leaders to positively engage young people and identify ways
to empower youth with greater technical skills and training,
as well as civic education and community service, and
encourage them to become advocates for religious tolerance.
Additional projects will support evidence-based critical
thinking and values-oriented education interventions among
at-risk student populations, including projects designed to
support the implementation of the GCTF’s Abu Dhabi
Memorandum on Good Practices for Education and Countering
Violent Extremism.
8) Preventing
Radicalization of Violence in Prisons and
Rehabilitation/Reintegration of Violent
Extremists
• Support to the UN Inter-Regional
Crime Research Institute (UNICRI) and the GCTF to lead
ongoing efforts to build international capacity to address
prison deficiencies, the risk of recruitment and
radicalization to violent extremism in prison settings, and
the danger of recidivism upon release. These projects aim to
provide training to detention officials on recognizing and
mitigating the signs of radicalization, working with known
incarcerated terrorists on disengagement, and implementing
prison management practices to separate known terrorists
from prison populations.
• Work with governments to
help shape corrections sectors so that a safe, secure, and
humane prison system will make inmates more resilient to
radicalization to violence.
• The U.S. is seeking to
provide funding for a series of country-specific workshops
focusing on rehabilitation and reintegration of foreign
terrorist fighters hosted by the International Institute for
Justice and the Rule of Law.
• Utilize the
International Corrections and Prison Association Annual
Conference in October 2015 in Australia, the largest
international corrections event of the year with more than
70 countries represented, to organize a workshop on
classifying violent extremists, conducting intelligence
operations on violent extremist threat groups, and
counter-messaging and rehabilitation
programs.
• Organize a regional conference on managing
violent extremists, focusing on Central America in Summer
2015 in El Salvador and convene senior-level corrections
personnel and experts from Mexico, Central America, the
Caribbean, and Latin America to address trends among violent
extremist prison populations and current effective methods
for managing extremists in prison.
9) Engaging
the Private and Charitable Sectors to Support Community-Led
Solutions Globally to Create Opportunity and Address Violent
Extremism
• Support efforts to promote
transparency and fight corruption through the Global
Enterprise Registration (GER) platform that seeks to stem
corruption by making business registration more transparent.
This platform is free and publically available, allowing an
entrepreneur to access general information worldwide, as
well as step-by-step instructions on how to register a
business in the 26 countries who have fully registered.
Knowledge of processes and requirements can lessen the
likelihood of bribery by allowing governments to see global
standards for online business registration, and facilitates
the adoption of best practices. And in doing so, GER enables
a country to simplify its registration process, thereby
encouraging more businesses to enter the formal economy and
driving economic growth.
• Support to women to engage
in the formal economy in order to create jobs and economic
opportunity. The Women’s Entrepreneurial Centers of
Resources, Education, Access, and Training for Economic
Empowerment (WECREATE) project establishes physical
entrepreneurial community centers tailored to a country’s
specific economic concerns and built in a safe and
centralized location. WECREATE Centers will provide women
access to a wide variety of resources, from mentorship and
networking opportunities, to sector-specific programming and
access to childcare. Importantly, WECREATE will engage men
and boys in the process, providing specific education and
resources on understanding the value of supporting women and
girls and how entrepreneurship can create opportunity for
their families and communities. WECREATE opened its first
Center in Pakistan in February. Additional efforts in
Zambia, Kenya, Cambodia, and Vietnam are currently
underway.
• The Resilient, Entrepreneurial, And Dynamic
Youth (READY) Initiative teaches at-risk youth between the
ages of 18 to 30 how to code, places them in a pre-arranged
online internship with a technology company, and prepares
them for online employment upon completion of the program.
This low-cost pathway to virtual employment offers
vulnerable youth a positive alternative and enables them to
become productive members of society. The first six-month
pilot program will be funded by the Department of State’s
Special Representative for Muslim Communities and reach 25
individuals in Egypt.
• Following the CVE Summit, the
U.S. will continue the dialogue on fostering economic
opportunities for vulnerable communities through a series of
roundtables working with key partners,
including:
o Entertainment Roundtable: In partnership
with the Annenberg Retreat at Sunnylands and University of
Southern California’s Annenberg School, CVE experts,
leaders in the global entertainment and media industry, and
content creators and technology experts will meet to explore
ways to counter violent ideologies and promote positive
narratives.
o Philanthropic Roundtable: Leading
foundations will come together to identify ways to fund
community-led initiatives that build resilience, provide
opportunities, and counter terrorist
narratives.
o Technology Roundtable: Technology companies
and related industry groups will discuss their role in
addressing terrorists’ use of digital media and social
networking platforms to recruit and radicalize. Leaders will
discuss how to (1) help communities better understand and
leverage key communication platforms; (2) assist community
efforts to develop and distribute counter-narrative content,
including short form videos; and (3) strengthen the “terms
of use” and treat violent extremist content with the same
zero tolerance approach as bullying.
o Economic Drivers
Roundtable: Leading economists, political scientists, think
tank experts, and policy analysts will convene to further
delineate the economic drivers of extremism, such as lack of
access to opportunity, unemployment, income, limited access
to finance for entrepreneurs, and skills training. Experts
will brainstorm policy tools to address these drivers.
Following an initial roundtable, a second roundtable
including government officials, donors, industry, chambers
of commerce, and leading international and local private
sector companies from the Middle East and Africa could
determine best practices for addressing job scarcity,
financial inclusion, underemployment, and skills training in
these regions toward shaping concrete
programs.
10) Strengthening Multilateral
Initiatives to Counter Violent Extremism
• In
partnership with the UN and by supporting the
Counter-Terrorism Implementation Task Force and the
Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate projects
on CVE, support for counter-radicalization technical
assistance efforts focused on identifying particular causes
and dynamics of radicalization, as well as specific high
risk locations within countries and cities.
• Support
for the GCTF’s CVE Working Group and the Forum’s broader
CVE priorities through providing political and financial
support to advance the implementation of the relevant GCTF
good practices, including those related to addressing
violent extremism. Together with relevant GCTF partners, the
U.S. will support new CVE Working Group efforts aimed at
advancing the issues raised during the CVE Summit. The U.S.
will host a GCTF event onFebruary 23-24 on community
engagement in the context of the foreign terrorist fighter
phenomenon. This practitioner-level workshop will allow for
in-depth discussions on a key Summit theme and include
officials and experts from the GCTF members as well as
select non-members.
• Support to the UN
Counter-Terrorism Centre, which provides assistance for
capacity-building efforts with member states and strengthens
the UN’s counterterrorism expertise.
• The U.S. plans
to support the secondment of two FBI subject matter experts
to INTERPOL headquarters in Lyon, France. The secondees will
support the development of INTERPOL’s Foreign Terrorist
Fighter Fusion Center in order to address the growing threat
posed by individuals traveling to conflict zones to support
or directly engage in terrorist activity.
• Support for
the Geneva-based Global Community Engagement and Resilience
Fund, a public-private fund to support local,
community-level initiatives aimed at strengthening
resilience in communities at risk of radicalization and
recruitment to violence (e.g., women’s engagement and
empowerment, youth outreach, media, education programs, and
vocational training).
• Support for Hedayah, the
international center of excellence on countering violent
extremism in Abu Dhabi, to make training more accessible and
enhance collaboration among governmental and civil society
leaders on countering violent extremism.
• Support for
the International Institute of Justice and the Rule of Law
in Malta, which offers rule of law-based training to
lawmakers, police, prosecutors, judges, corrections
officials, and other justice sector stakeholders on how to
address terrorism and violent extremism within a rule of law
framework.
• Support to the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe for tailored CVE programs,
training seminars, and regional initiatives in conjunction
with other multilateral fora, including the
GCTF.
ENDS