A key element of the BTU Cottbus-Senftenberg action plan to combat right-wing extremism and discrimination is the Monitoring Centre for documenting incidents of far-right influence peddling and discrimination, as well as explaining the situation and supporting those affected.
With the Monitoring Centre, the BTU Cottbus-Senftenberg Executive Board has created another university structure to help fight discrimination and generate relevant knowledge. The Monitoring Centre is affiliated with the Research Center for (Social) Education Civil Society Counterstrategies for Dealing with Right-Wing Extremism (FUR) in the Department of Methods and Theories of Social Work of Faculty 4. Its institutional setting ensures that data collected receives the most stringent protection.
Strengthening democracy by countering the influence of far-right actors
Christian Obermüller, Prof.*in Dr.*in Heike Radvan
Right-wing extremists have been seeking to dominate Cottbus society for a number of years. The region is now home to a toxic mixture of militant neo-Nazi hooligan and martial arts groups, “Reichsbürger” (who refuse to recognise the modern German state), conspiracy theorists, right-wing clubs and the "Alternative for Germany" (AfD) political party. This complex is also economically anchored in Cottbus – with catering and security companies, music and clothing labels.i
Far-right actors primarily affect the city by violently targeting groups who need to learn strategies for countering threats and (potential) aggression. As interviewees in a recent study emphasized, “You have to learn how to move.” ii The city’s menacing atmosphere also negatively affects BTU students and employees.
