Relational aggression—coordinated online pressure to deplatform or boycott—has evolved into a mutual deterrence dynamic among cultural actors: each side can trigger costly cancellations, so institutions pre‑emptively remove contested voices to avoid escalation. That creates an equilibrium where both criticism and dissent are chilled because the organizational cost of hosting controversy is too high.
— This reframes contemporary culture‑war fights as a strategic, game‑theoretic problem (like mutually assured destruction) with predictable institutional distortions: risk‑averse organisations, narrower repertoires of permitted speech, and greater power for well‑organised pressure groups.
Helen Dale
2026.01.10
100% relevant
Randa Abdel‑Fattah’s deplatforming and the collapse of both Bendigo and Adelaide writers’ events exemplify how a single targeted campaign cascades into pre‑emptive institutional capitulation.
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