The CCOA Training Programme is designed to strengthen a coordinated European response to online antisemitism by equipping CCOA members, multipliers, micro-grantee recipients, and external experts with the skills, knowledge, and networks to take effective action. By integrating policy insights, research, and prevention initiatives, the programme not only builds individual expertise but also strengthens collective capacity to understand, prevent, and respond to the evolving landscape of online antisemitism across Europe.
Crucially, the programme is anchored in a longer-term vision: to connect actors across sectors, address siloed and fragmented approaches, and foster sustained collaboration across European prevention efforts. By linking diverse stakeholders and areas of expertise, it enables the development of innovative, coordinated responses to hate—particularly antisemitism—while reinforcing the networks, shared frameworks, and joint action needed to achieve lasting impact at the European level.
What You Can Expect
- Expert-Led Deep Dives and Workshops: Gain valuable insights from leading practitioners, policymakers, and researchers through sessions centred on countering antisemitism and building resilience.
- Engagement with the Broader CCOA Network: Unlock opportunities for collaboration and joint projects across the wider CCOA community.
- Peer Exchange: Share experiences and challenges, while learning from colleagues working in diverse national contexts.
Schedule
Upcoming Sessions
16.06.2026, 16:30-17:30 CEST
Trendy Hate: Antisemitism on TikTok
This session presents new research on the evolving language of online antisemitism across digital platforms. By tracking codes, hashtags, and emerging buzzwords, it sheds light on how antisemitic content adapts to moderation and circulates in subtle forms.
Register here: Codes, Memes and open hate: Tracing Online Antisemitism across online platforms
24.06.2026, 16:30-17:30 CEST
Approaches to Working with Regulators and Platforms
This session explores different approaches to engaging with regulators and online platforms in addressing harmful content. It highlights current efforts to assess systemic risks under the Digital Services Act (DSA) and to develop coordinated policy responses to disinformation, hate speech, and extremism.
Register here: Approaches to working with regulators and platforms
09.07.2026, 16:30-18:00 CEST
Professional Counseling and Support in Response to Antisemitic Incidents and Crimes
This session explores how to support people affected by antisemitic incidents through trauma-sensitive, community-based counseling approaches. Drawing on the work of OFEK e.V., it highlights strategies for strengthening safety, empowerment, emotional support, access to rights and resources, and sustainable support networks in the aftermath of antisemitism.
Register here: Professional Counseling and Support in Response to Antisemitic Incidents and Crimes
21.07.2026, 16:30-18:00 CEST
ISD Research on Digital Regulatory Implementation
This session presents ISD research on the implementation of platform regulation, focusing on how provisions are applied in practice. It examines early findings on platform compliance, risk assessment, and transparency measures, highlighting both progress and ongoing challenges.
Register here: ISD Research on Digital Regulatory Implementation
Past sessions
28.05.2026, 16:30-17:30 CEST
Digital Threat Detection and Prevention in Combating Online Antisemitism
This session explores the role of digital tools and methods in identifying and addressing online antisemitism. It examines current approaches to threat detection, including the use of automated systems and AI-backed tools, computational linguistics, and platform governance strategies, highlighting both their potential and limitations. The discussion reflects on how prevention efforts can be strengthened through collaboration between technology, policy, academia, and civil society.
13.05.2026, 16:30-17:30 CEST
Antisemitism in Online Gaming Spaces
This session will explore the various ways in which antisemitism manifests within digital gaming culture, including in game development, the use of existing games, community interactions, cultural references, and processes of gamification.
30.04.2026, 16:30-17:30 CEST
Countering Hate: Reclaiming the Narrative in the Face of Far-Right Ideology
with the Expo Foundation
This session introduces practical strategies for countering far-right and racist narratives, drawing on the Swedish anti-racist foundation Expo’s structured, research-based Courage method. Participants will learn how far-right and extremist narratives work, gain tools to respond in professional and civil society contexts and explore strategies for shifting from reactive counterarguments to proactive democratic framing.
This session will offer an in-depth exploration of the CCOA Toolkit, focusing on its conceptual framework and theory of change, as well as the deconstruction method it employs to combat online antisemitism. The authors of the toolkit will introduce participants to the toolkit’s core principles, providing insight into how these can be effectively applied within both training settings and real-world contexts.
This session will provide an introduction to the concept of ‘harms’ as defined by ISD (Institute for Strategic Dialogue). It will explore how different forms of harm are identified, understood, and addressed within the context of antisemitism, with a focus on setting the groundwork for the training of multipliers.
For more information on all of CCOA’s ongoing initiatives, please contact us at [email protected]