ICYMI: CEP Launches The 4R Network
Program Supports Rehabilitation And Reintegration Of Terrorism-Related Offenders In U.S.
(New York, N.Y.) – On November 16, the Counter Extremism Project (CEP) publicly launched the Radicalization, Rehabilitation, Reintegration, and Recidivism (4R) Network, with a web event featuring CEP leadership and international experts in a conversation moderated by Michael A. Brown, deputy director of the Center for Prevention Programs & Partnerships (CP3) at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
Hundreds of individuals serving jihadist-related or right-wing terrorism-related sentences are scheduled to be released from U.S. prisons between 2022 and 2025, yet there are no formal, in-prison recidivism reduction programs tailored for convicted terrorists, nor a fully realized post-release initiative to support the reentry and reintegration of terrorism-related offenders.
The 4R Network seeks to address these gaps with what Deputy Director Brown called a “first of its kind” program tasked with facilitating the safe, healthy, and dignified rehabilitation and reintegration of violent extremist-affiliated criminal offenders while decreasing the likelihood of in-prison radicalization and increasing local resilience to violent extremism over the long term.
To learn more about the 4R Network, register for members-only access to trainings, workshops, videos, and other content, or inquire about support options, please visit 4RNetwork.org.