Is Deradicalisation Coercion?

Is Deradicalisation Coercion?

2 June 2026

4.1 MINS

Governments are rushing to ‘deradicalise’ those with opposing political values — but when belief runs to the heart, no state program can engineer a change of mind.

What is Deradicalisation About?

We have been hearing that word – deradicalisation – tossed around again of late, normally as a question: “Will they undertake a deradicalisation programme?” The allied question is “Will they be forced to be part of it or invited?”

Both questions sit on unstated assumptions. If my guesses are anywhere near accurate, those hidden beliefs make the discussion around this procedure shallow, or even worse, blunt manipulation.

Without having access to the ‘curriculum and processes’ that are actually involved in these proposed programs in Australia, I suggest the following mistakes in the concept of ‘deradicalisation’.

Firstly, the proposed programs are in response to people coming to Australia – which is a democracy founded on some Judeo-Christian ideas that worked their way into the general social structures of certain people groups – who have political commitments different to this heritage. In particular, the ‘Sharia law’ framework promoted by what some call “political Islam” has brought this contrast to a head since the murder of fifteen people at Bondi Beach.

So, the purpose of deradicalisation programs seems to be ‘converting’ someone with one set of values to another set of values. If we are engaging in discussions about our values, we are also inviting consideration of our beliefs, because these give us the framework for what we consider important in our lives – the choices where we give privilege to one set of actions over another set.

Is it a matter of faith?

On what do we base our beliefs? Our faith, where “faith” represents the unstated assumptions we have that prop up our hopes for today and tomorrow. In this understanding, what the government is proposing is a conversion program, which is ironic because state-level governments have banned such activities in some contexts.

How is such conversion achieved? Is it possible to simply describe and explain a new set of beliefs to demonstrate the superiority of the alternative to what the person is currently committed? Sometimes that might have an impact, but in this context, it is doubtful. The reason for this is that belief in Islam as a social and political structure has probably been taken to heart. That is, instruction alone does not shift commitments when the heart is set. As others have commented, we cannot force the soul of another.

It is what Viktor Frankl described in his Search for Meaning. Those in a concentration camp who would not, in their hearts, give in to the anti-human treatment they received, survived more than those who let go.

Faith is invitational, not forced

This kind of human reflection exposes the pretence of governments that say they can run such programs and see such deep and personal turn-arounds. Do they believe that psychologists have the scientific knowledge to structure such experiences? Let us remember history clearly in this space – whenever social engineers have played in these kinds of change spaces, we see coercive manipulation. In the most intense instances, we see physical harm, or more bluntly, torture.

If humans were but animals, retraining would be possible. Even then, the training would need to be within the predetermined instinctual inheritances of the species that was involved. Going outside of those parameters would lead to neurotic actions being the new pattern of behaviour.

However, humans are not animals. We are at our most ugly when we act this way (and if you haven’t read it for a while, go to the classic description of the conflation of animals and humans in Huxley’s Animal Farm, or more subtly in Golding’s Lord of the Flies).

This poses a difficulty for atheists. How can they appeal to the heart of someone when they believe we are simply physically predetermined beings shaped by our social contexts? They deny that we have agency in the face of our physical and social natures, because to accept that we do, would introduce the necessity for us to have self-consciousness beyond our socially contextualised physical selves.

And, how can we explain that self-consciousness if we resist the idea of us being ensouled creatures? Philosophers still debate, wrestle, and in truth, at times, run away from such discussions. I have rarely heard politicians willing to engage in such reflection.

It is part of why we find ourselves in such conundrums about “What is a woman?” Or, “let’s agree with social cohesion” without any clear basis of understanding what such cohesion can be built upon. The ‘deepest’ the conversations go is in the realm of values. However, values reflect beliefs, which come from that in which we put our hope and vision for the future (our faith).

Forcing the soul of another leads to deep harm

Deradicalisation programs? C.S. Lewis warned what the politics of this looked like in his adult fantasy novel, That Hideous Strength. It is not pretty, but it is realistic.

Speaking of Frankl, one of his lessons from surviving a concentration camp was to have a redress of the rampant individualism that enables people to ignore that society needs a common mind, based on a common faith, to survive:

Freedom, however, is not the last word… Freedom is but the negative aspect of responsibleness [sic].  In fact, freedom is in danger of degenerating into mere arbitrariness unless it is lived in terms of responsibleness. That is why I recommend that the Statue of Liberty on the East Coast be supplemented by a Statue of Responsibility on the West Coast. (Frankl, 1959, pp. 155-6)

Are we inviting and checking responses?

Are deradicalisation programs ways of growing freedom in relation to responsibility? No, that is only achieved when we voluntarily commit our hearts to one another in good faith. It is only sustained when we actively remind those already here about what our civility is based upon. It is only sustained when we slow down and stop those who wish to come and upend those beliefs. It is not achieved by government-run mind-game activities.

Isn’t good faith what Jesus Christ asked of us? To find good faith in Him, and to invite others into it? In justice and mercy, faithfully before God?

Let’s keep reminding others that we are not just animals, and that the unseen aspect of reality is where the real potency lives – for as the apostle Paul said, those aspects are the eternal ones (2 Cor. 4:18).

___

Image courtesy of Adobe.

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2 Comments

  1. 81bb7475d1e69693caa97d73b05141ed5055b32690d4390c363170eb36c8d797?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Phillip Hazleton 2 June 2026 at 10:39 am - Reply

    An excellent article touching on several contemporary and urgent issues. Again, however, I am saddened that such common sense is not at all common and utterly unknown in the halls of what passes for government. A correction …. Sadness accompanied by increasing anger. Thank heaven there’s Christ!

  2. 88895edd636b06243f9fd428bd489df187815eaea5fa354be4a52463f62a2932?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    gail Petherick 2 June 2026 at 10:49 am - Reply

    Thank you for the article on this subject of deradicalisation…Just adding another slant and thought for Christian readers. I think we must pray for each of those who come into our country who are radicalised and remember that ‘the weapons of our warfare are mighty to pull down strongholds. ‘ We are not struggling or fighting with flesh and blood but with principalities and powers and rulers in high places. In Isaiah and Ephesians we are reminded that the rebelling angels that left heaven with Satan, are still there in the heavenlies and interfering of earth, aiming to deceive, to twist scripture and truth and to darken and mislead mankind’s soul…Satan’s quest remains to lie, deceive, destroy and kill
    …The ones who fall into the hands of radicals or cults have a layer of spiritual power invading their lives and they need our prayers to set them free. Jesus said he came to set the prisoners free from sin and all that is deceptive or harmful spiritually or to the mind and soul. If they can also have the choice of hearing or reading the word they will receive His Light through the power of the Holy spirit and learn about Jesus sacrifice for them on the cross. In many cases God sends a dream of vision in the early stages and they then have a desire to seek Him. May God do that also as our Govt and social workers and pyschologists work with those who have been radicalised and help them become repsonsible for their own destiny and aims in life.

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