(Re) Assessing the Threat from Incel Violence: A Study of Violent Incel-Related Federal Cases in America

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in Journal Articles, Publications

(Re) Assessing the Threat from Incel Violence: A Study of Violent Incel-Related Federal Cases in America

By in Journal Articles, Publications

This article reassesses claims that the Incel movement constitutes a form of terrorism by examining its ideology, patterns of violence, and empirical case data. Drawing on an original dataset of US federal Incel-related cases from 2020–2023, alongside comparative analysis of prominent attacks, the study finds that Incel-linked violence lacks the strategic intent, coherent ideology, and communicative political purpose central to terrorism. Instead, such violence aligns more closely with grievance-driven, misogynistic hate crime and non-ideological mass killing frameworks. The findings caution against conceptual inflation and argue for preserving analytic distinctions between terrorism and other forms of extremist or idiosyncratic violence.

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