By Claire Lehmann
Friday, June 27, 2025
Banging drums in Columbia University’s Butler Library in
early May, a group of protesters shouted: “Free, free Palestine!” When campus
security shut the doors of the reading room, effectively trapping the
demonstrators in, their chants turned into pleas. One person tried to break
through to the exit, and a scuffle broke out. “You’re hurting him, stop!” a
girl cried out. By
the end of the occupation, 80 protesters had been arrested. Sixty-one
of them were women.
The Columbia protest made national news in the U.S., but
the striking gender imbalance of its participants went largely unnoticed. It
shouldn’t have. Whether the cause is Gaza, climate change, Black Lives Matter,
or feminism, overrepresentation of young women has become the norm in
progressive activism. And this shift signals a susceptibility to ideological
extremism.
Women moving to the left is a global phenomenon. A 2020
study on the Extinction Rebellion environmental movement in the U.K. (a group
which regularly
engages in civil disobedience such as blocking traffic
and vandalism) described it as a “highly feminised” protest culture. Surveys have found that
attendance at climate demonstrations in cities around the world tends to be
about 60 percent female, and recent American progressive movements—such as Black Lives Matter and the Gaza encampments, many of which were supported or led
by the female-founded Jewish
Voice for Peace—have likewise been launched and sustained by women.
Data published
by John Burn-Murdoch in the Financial Times confirms
that the shift spans continents. In South Korea, the United States, Germany,
and the United Kingdom, Gen Z women have shifted toward “hyper-progressive”
political positions, while men in the same age cohort have held steady or moved
to the right. In the U.S., according to Gallup data, women ages 18 to 30 are
now 30 percentage points “more liberal” than their male peers.
There is growing awareness of how young men can be drawn
into far-right extremism or misogynistic
subcultures, but we in the media—and society more broadly—pay less
attention to how young women become drawn into political subcultures. Indeed,
the terms “radicalization” and “women” are rarely—if ever—seen together. This
oversight has consequences, because radicalization—defined as rigid commitment
to an ideological cause to the point where it distorts one’s worldview, harms
mental health, undermines relationships, or disrupts functioning—is not a
male-only phenomenon.
Of course, political engagement is not, in itself, cause
for concern. The fact that young women attend climate protests or BLM marches
is not evidence of extremism. But if we imagine political engagement on a
spectrum, the extreme end is not benign. And the failure to recognize this has
allowed radicalism to flourish.
The escalating tactics of climate activism illustrate the
pattern. Last year, three female members of the British climate action group
Just Stop Oil, alongside two male members, were sentenced to prison for climbing onto overhead signs of a major motorway, forcing
police to shut down traffic. One of the men received a five-year sentence,
while the others were sentenced to four years each. Two trucks collided and one
police officer was injured amid the chaos. The stunt
created major gridlock that led to people missing medical appointments, exams,
and flights.
Another tactic popular with climate protesters is the
defacing or attempted vandalism of artwork: Vincent Van Gogh’s “Sunflowers” was
targeted by
two female activists in London, while Edgar Degas’ “Little
Dancer Aged Fourteen” was splashed
with paint by two activists, one male, one female, at
the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.
Men are still engaging in radical left-wing protest, of
course, with Aaron
Bushnell being a salient example. But we find it easy
to recognize radicalization when it happens in young men, while romanticizing
or ignoring the same phenomenon in women.
In my home country, Australia, a female protester cemented
her arm into a car near a major freeway to protest a
weapons exhibition in Melbourne last year. In Sydney, a 22-year-old
woman shut down the Harbour Tunnel during peak-hour
traffic by chaining herself to her steering wheel. Another offender, Deanna
“Violet” Coco—who helped shut down the West Gate Bridge in March 2024, delaying
emergency services and forcing a pregnant woman to give birth roadside—recently
had her jail
sentence tripled on appeal after a judge noted that
she had 15 court appearances in less than four years.
Sometimes, mainstream institutions don’t just overlook
female extremism—they actively encourage it. In Australia, Elsa Tuet-Rosenberg,
a Melbourne-based activist who helped
dox more than 600 Jewish-Australian creatives
following Hamas’ attacks on October 7, 2023, has delivered taxpayer-funded
“anti-racism” training to primary schools through her
own consulting firm. Clementine Ford, a feminist author with a large social
media following, has
spread conspiracy theories about Israel, dismissed the mass rape of Israeli
women on October 7 as unverified, and accused the IDF of manufacturing hostage
deaths—all while remaining associated with a prestigious publisher, and being
featured as a
speaker at major public events.
This dynamic is perhaps best reflected in the career of
Greta Thunberg. Since she began skipping school at the age of 15 to demand
action on climate change, Thunberg has been showered with encouragement and
awards. She was named the youngest-ever recipient of Time’s Person of the Year
honor in 2019 following her “How Dare You” speech at
the United Nations. She has since received multiple Nobel Peace Prize nominations and an array of awards
from media, philanthropic, scientific, and academic institutions, including
several honorary
doctorates. No matter what one thinks of Thunberg’s activism, it is hard to
imagine a young man receiving the same level of global adulation. A “Gus”
Thunberg who encouraged children to skip school would be more likely to be
called in for detention than invited to the U.N.
Thunberg’s trajectory illustrates a broader pattern:
Radical behavior from young women is not just tolerated but actively encouraged
through awards, platforms, and institutional support. This creates a feedback
loop. The incentive structures that rewarded Thunberg so handsomely for her
climate activism have since encouraged her to expand into pro-Palestinian
activism. “If you, as a climate activist, don’t also fight for a Free Palestine
and an end to colonialism and oppression all over the world,” the now 22-year-old
activist declared at a
demonstration in Milan last year, “then you should not
be able to call yourself a climate activist.” This demand for ideological
purity across unrelated causes is a signature move of female radicalism, and a
feature of how “intersectionality” is used in activist cultures. What began as
a framework for understanding different forms of disadvantage, and how they can
overlap, is now a litmus test for moral conformity—not only on issues like
climate and Gaza, but also on heavily charged topics like abortion, where
deviation from the dominant view is treated as betrayal. While generally not
coercing people through violence, female radicals coerce through threats of
shaming and social exclusion.
It’s easy to dismiss such actions as inconsequential
compared to the violence
of male radicals. Women rarely engage in political assassinations or mass
shootings, the way a small subset of fanatical men do. But the blocking of
infrastructure and the vandalism of cultural property inflict a real toll—on
the public, yes, but also on the activists themselves. Social coercion through
threats of exclusion causes young women across the world significant anxiety.
More concerning is that this phenomenon remains largely unstudied. A growing
number of academics are researching how and why young men become radicalized,
but they generally exhibit little interest in addressing similar processes in
women—with the exception of female radicalization in the context
of Islamic extremism.
Still, existing studies in moral psychology and social
behavior offer valuable clues about the underlying dynamics. Moral Foundations
Theory, developed by the social psychologist Jonathan Haidt and colleagues,
argues that human moral reasoning is built on a set of intuitive foundations:
Loyalty, Authority, Care, Fairness, and Purity. A 2020
study using this framework across 67 countries found
that women consistently scored higher than men on the latter three. The Care
foundation relates to our sensitivity to the suffering of others—an
extension of the instinct that compels parents, especially mothers, to respond
to infant distress. Fairness is tied to notions of justice and equality, while
Purity—originally evolved to protect against disease—can manifest as a desire
for ideological or moral cleanliness. These tendencies, while adaptive in many
contexts, can also make young women particularly receptive to political
narratives framed in terms of trauma, injustice, and moral absolutism. And they
also create vulnerability to ideologies that use victimhood as currency.
The way young women organize their social lives compounds
this vulnerability. Studies by developmental psychologist Joyce Benenson have
found that female friend groups tend to be less resilient than those of males, and many women suffer from an intense fear
of social exclusion. The pressure to “fit into” a group is stronger for
girls than for boys, possibly leading girls to support beliefs or ideas out of
a desire for social harmony rather than true conviction.
These dynamics create perfect conditions for availability
cascades, a social phenomenon—described by Cass Sunstein and Timur Kuran in 2007—in which a group comes
to hold a belief through chain reactions. Take, for example, Greta Thunberg’s
declaration that climate activists must also fight for Palestinian liberation.
In progressive social circles where Thunberg is held up as a moral authority,
some girls might think this argument makes no sense—but they won’t say so.
Collectively, such silence can be mistaken for universal agreement, pressuring
others to mold their views to fit in. This artificial consensus can snowball,
as individuals assume everyone else in their peer group agrees with a given
sentiment, completely unaware that many don’t. The result is a fragile system
held together by fear rather than belief.
Social media intensifies these cascades. When female
friendship groups migrate online, superficial displays of consensus—the sharing
of memes, badges, and hashtags—can feel mandatory. Platforms like Instagram and
TikTok serve up a stream of trauma-related content—activating the care
instinct—while exposing young women to constant cues that their safety,
belonging, and self-worth depend on adopting “pure” ideological postures. The
result is a technological and ideological hijacking of female psychology.
It should come as no surprise, then, that progressive
girls were the first group to suffer a major mental
health decline following the mass adoption of
smartphones and social media around 2012. As Haidt points out in his book, The
Anxious Generation, and in his newsletter, After Babel, Gen Z girls have
been socialized online in a culture based on hypervigilance toward harm,
accompanied by demands for moral absolutism and purity.
This represents a new form of radicalization that
operates differently from its male counterpart. When ideology takes over female
friendship groups, the process is less violent and more relational, driven by
peer pressure, emotional reasoning, and fear of social exclusion. It thrives in
spaces that appear safe and caring, but beneath the language of justice lies a
brittle conformity.
The implications extend beyond individual well-being to
institutional trust and social cohesion. When compassionate instincts become
misdirected and the instinct for purity leads to coercion, the resulting
absolutism becomes toxic. A formal study of female radicalization would need to
examine evolutionary psychology, social psychology, and the incentive
structures that reward extremism. Recognizing this pattern is the first step
toward protecting young women from the misguided narratives that exploit their moral
sensitivity. But to change it, we must first name it.
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