Back to overview
Event
Upcoming event

ICCT Annual Conference 2024 "Houston, we have a problem": Counter-Terrorism in the Age of Uncertainty

May
28
-
May
29
Register

On Tuesday 28 and Wednesday 29 May, the International Centre for Counter-Terrorism (ICCT) organises the Annual Conference, under the overarching theme: “Houston we have a problem”: Counter-Terrorism in the Age of Uncertainty. The Conference will take place at Beeld and Geluid in The Hague. 

Within the last years, the world has witnessed increasingly diversifying patterns of extremism and terrorism. In order to develop durable counter-measures, we ask which of these current trends and phenomena will stay or become even more relevant within the next electoral cycle. Painting scenarios of how these trends and phenomena will develop within the next few years can help to identify strategies to counter them while upholding the rule of law. By bringing together a mix of key CT and P/CVE practitioners, policy-makers, and international scholars, we hope to explore these pressing developments in depth throughout the two-day conference.

The Introductory Remarks and the Plenary Sessions on Day 1 will be open to a public audience (both in-person and online) to encourage the conversation and address questions of public interest.  The workshop sessions on day 2 are invitation only for a select group of researchers, policy-makers, and practitioners. They will take place behind closed doors, under the Chatham House Rule.

Registration to attend the hybrid Plenary Sessions on Day 1 are now open!

 

 

Programme

Day 1, Tuesday 28 May, 13:30-18:00 

13:00-13:30     Registration guests

13:30-13:40     Welcome Note by Thomas Renard, ICCT Director

13:40-13:50     Introductory Remarks

14:00-14:15     Campfire Session + Q&A

This panel will kick off the discussion under the overarching theme of the Annual Conference.

Speakers:

Hans-Jakob Schindler has wide international experience in diplomacy, intelligence and security. He joined the ISIL (Da’esh), al-Qaida and Taliban Sanctions Monitoring Team at the beginning of 2013 and was appointed Coordinator in July 2015.

Jonathan Hall is an independent barrister based in London, appointed by the Home Secretary as the UK’s fourth Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation in 2019. In 2024, he was also appointed as the UK’s first Independent Reviewer of State Threats Legislation. 

Liesbeth van der Heide works at the Municipality of The Hague, coordinating the approach to Prevention, Polarisation and Radicalisation. Additionally, she is an assistant professor at the Institute of Security and Global Affairs (ISGA), Leiden University and an  Associate Research Fellow at the International Centre for Counter-Terrorism (ICCT).

Zuzana Košková is Head of Red Watch program focusing on Chinese influence at European Values Center for Security Policy, NGO based in Prague. She is a sinologist with experience in diplomacy, management of research and science, event management or social media.

15:15-15:45    Coffee break

15:45-16:45    Second Plenary Session on AI and Disinformation + Q&A

This panel will focus on the field of AI, misinformation and their potential impacts and implications for terrorism and counter-terrorism in the coming five years. What are the key threats from AI, and misinformation in this regard? What opportunities may AI provide in relation to these issues? How/can we already prepare for or mitigate key implications from these developments? Panelists from diverse disciplines and industries will offer their perspectives.

Speakers:

Jannis Jost is a research associate in the Department of Terrorism and Radicalization Research at the Institute for Security Policy at Kiel University (ISPK). He works on in-depth analyses of terrorist radicalization and the relationship between terrorist groups and their surrounding environment, both in Europe and abroad.

Stephane Baele is a Professor of International Relations at UCLouvain (Belgium) and Honorary Associate Professor of Security and Political Violence at the University of Exeter (UK). His multidisciplinary research, which focuses on violent political actors' communications, has been published in leading journals such as the Journal of Conflict Resolution & Political ViolencePolitical Psychology, or the Journal of Language & Social Psychology.

16:45-17:00    Closing remarks

17:00-18:00    Networking Drinks

 

Day 2, Wednesday 29 May, 9:00-18:00

We will host four workshops on distinct but related topics, namely the Rising Threat of State-Terrorism emanating from outside European Borders, Monitoring and Evaluation of Counter-Terrorism Programmes, Shrinking Support for P/CVE, and Transnational Repression. 

 

For more info contact ICCT at events@icct.nl