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Anti-cult movement

The anti-cult movement, abbreviated ACM and also known as the countercult movement,[1] consists of various governmental and non-governmental organizations and individuals that seek to raise awareness of cults, uncover coercive practices used to attract and retain members, and help those who have become involved with harmful cult practices.

One prominent group within the anti-cult movement, Christian counter-cult organizations, oppose new religious movements on theological grounds, categorizing them as cults, and distribute information to this effect through church networks and via printed literature.[2]

Concept edit

The anti-cult movement is conceptualized as a collection of individuals and groups, whether formally organized or not, who oppose some "new religious movements" (or "cults"). This countermovement has reportedly recruited participants from family members of "cultists," former group members (or apostates), religious groups (including Jewish and Christian groups)[3] and associations of health professionals.[4][5] Although there is a trend towards globalization,[6] the social and organizational bases vary significantly from country to country according to the social and political opportunity structures in each place.[7]

As with many subjects in the social sciences, the movement is variously defined. A significant minority opinion suggests that analysis should treat the secular anti-cult movement separately from the religiously motivated (mainly Christian) groups.[8][9]

The anti-cult movement might be divided into four classes:

  1. secular counter-cult groups;
  2. Christian evangelical counter-cult groups;
  3. groups formed to counter a specific cult; and
  4. organizations that offer some form of exit counseling.[10]

Most if not all of the groups involved express the view that there are potentially deleterious effects associated with some new religious movements.[11]

Religious and secular critics edit

Commentators differentiate two main types of opposition to "cults":

  • religious opposition: related to theological issues.
  • secular opposition: related to emotional, social, financial, and economic consequences of cult involvement, where "cult" can refer to a religious or to a secular group.

Hadden's taxonomy of the anti-cult movement edit

Jeffrey K. Hadden sees four distinct classes of opposition to "cults":[12]

  1. Opposition grounded on religion
    • Opposition usually defined in theological terms.
    • Cults considered heretical.
    • Endeavors to expose the heresy and correct the beliefs of those who have strayed from a truth.
    • Prefers metaphors of deception rather than possession.
    • Serves two important functions:
      • protects members (especially youth) from heresy, and
      • increases solidarity among the faithful.
  2. Secular opposition
    • Regards individual autonomy as the manifest goal – achieved by getting people out of groups that use mind control and deceptive proselytization.
    • Regards the struggle as an issue of control rather than theology.
    • Organizes around families of children currently or previously involved in a cult.
    • Has the unannounced goal of disabling or destroying NRMs organizationally.
  3. Apostates
    • Former members who consider themselves egregiously wronged by a cult, often with the coordination and encouragement of anti-cult groups.
  4. Entrepreneurial opposition
    • A few "entrepreneurs" who have made careers of organizing opposition groups.
    • Broadcasters, journalists, and lawyers who base a reputation or career on anti-cult activities.

Cult-watching groups and individuals, and other opposition to cults edit

Family-members of adherents edit

Some opposition to cults (and to some NRMs) started with family-members of cult-adherents who had problems with the sudden changes in character, lifestyle and future plans of their young adult children who had joined NRMs. Ted Patrick, widely known as "the father of deprogramming," exemplifies members of this group. The former Cult Awareness Network (old CAN) grew out of a grassroots-movement by parents of cult-members.[13] The American Family Foundation (today the International Cultic Studies Association) originated from a father whose daughter had joined a high-control group, and other parents concerned about young adult offspring populated the American Family Foundation's membership.[14]

Clinical psychologists and psychiatrists edit

From the 1970s onwards some psychiatrists and clinical psychologists accused "cults" of harming some of their members.[15][16] These accusations were sometimes based on observations made during therapy, and sometimes were related to theories regarding brainwashing or mind control.[17]

Former members edit

Anson Shupe, David G. Bromley and Joseph Ventimiglia coined the term atrocity tales in 1979,[18] which Bryan R. Wilson later took up in relation to former members' narratives. Bromley and Shupe defined an "atrocity tale" as the symbolic presentation of action or events, real or imagined, in such a context that they come to flagrantly violate the (presumably) shared premises upon which a given set of social relationships should take place. The recounting of such tales has the intention of reaffirming normative boundaries. By sharing the reporter's disapproval or horror, an audience reasserts normative prescription and clearly locates the violator beyond the limits of public morality.[19][20]

Christian countercult movement edit

In the 1940s, the long-held opposition by some established Christian denominations to non-Christian religions or supposedly heretical, or counterfeit, Christian sects crystallized into a more organized Christian counter cult movement in the United States. For those belonging to the movement, all religious groups claiming to be Christian, but deemed outside of Christian orthodoxy, were considered "cults."[21] Christian cults are new religious movements which have a Christian background but are considered to be theologically deviant by members of other Christian churches.[22] In his influential book The Kingdom of the Cults, first published in the United States in 1965, Christian scholar Walter Martin defines Christian cults as groups that follow the personal interpretation of an individual, rather than the understanding of the Bible accepted by mainstream Christianity. He mentions the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Christian Science, the Jehovah's Witnesses, Unitarian Universalism, and Unity as examples.[23]

The Christian countercult movement asserts that Christian sects whose beliefs are partially or wholly not in accordance with the Bible are erroneous. It also states that a religious sect can be considered a "cult" if its beliefs involve a denial of what they view as any of the essential Christian teachings such as salvation, the Trinity, Jesus himself as a person, the ministry of Jesus, the Miracles of Jesus, the Crucifixion of Jesus, the Death of Christ, the Resurrection of Christ, the Second Coming of Christ, and the Rapture.[24][25][26]

Countercult literature usually expresses doctrinal or theological concerns and a missionary or apologetic purpose.[27] It presents a rebuttal by emphasizing the teachings of the Bible against the beliefs of non-fundamental Christian sects. Christian countercult activist writers also emphasize the need for Christians to evangelize to followers of cults.[28][29][30]

Governmental opposition edit

The secular opposition to cults and new religious movements operates internationally, though a number of sizable and sometimes expanding groups originated in the United States. Some European countries, such as France, Germany, Belgium and Switzerland have introduced legislation or taken other measures against cults or "cultic deviations."

In the Netherlands "cults," sects, and new religious movements have the same legal rights as larger and more mainstream religious movements.[31] As of 2004, the Netherlands do not have an anti-cult movement of any significance.[32]

National or regional anti-cult movements edit

United States edit

The first organized opposition to new religions in the United States appeared in 1971 with the formation of FREECOG (Parents Committee to Free Our Sons and Daughters from the Children of God).[33][34] In 1973, FREECOG renamed itself as the Volunteer Parents of America, and then the Citizens Freedom Foundation (CFF), before becoming the Cult Awareness Network (CAN) in 1984.[13] In 1979, another anti-cult group, the American Family Foundation (AFF) was founded (which is now the International Cultic Studies Association); it began organizing annual conferences, launched an information phone-line, and published the Cult Observer and the Cultic Studies Journal.[14] In 1996, CAN was sued for its involvement in the deprogramming of a member of the United Pentecostal Church International named Jason Scott.[35] Other parties joined the lawsuit, and this bankrupted the organization. A group which included a number of Scientologists purchased the "Cult Awareness Network" name and formed the "New Cult Awareness Network."[36] In the 1970s and 1980s American anti-cultist and deprogrammer Ted Patrick was charged at least thirteen times and convicted at least three times for kidnapping and unlawful imprisonment for his deprogramming activities.[37][38] In 1980, Patrick was convicted of "conspiracy, false imprisonment and kidnapping" of Roberta McElfish, a waitress in Tucson, Arizona, after accepting US$7,500 from her family to deprogram her.[38]

Europe edit

In the European Union, the FECRIS (Fédération Européenne des Centres de Recherche et d'Information sur le Sectarisme, English: European Federation of Centres of Research and Information on Sectarianism) organization has been active since 1994 as an umbrella for European organizations investigating the activities of groups labeled to be cults or sects.[39]

The European Coordination for Freedom of Conscience, a participating organization in the EU Fundamental Rights Platform, issued a report on FECRIS in 2014, describing the differences between how the organization describes itself and what its key figures actually do and say. It summarized that "activities of FECRIS constitute a contravention of the principles of respect and tolerance of beliefs... [and] is in direct opposition to the principles of the European Convention on Human Rights and other international human rights instruments."[40]

In 2015 FECRIS published a list of its member organizations, personalities and correspondents.[41]

France edit

Anti-cult organizations in France have included the Centre Roger Ikor (1981–) and MILS (Mission interministérielle de lutte contre les sectes; English: "Interministerial Mission in the Fight Against Cults"), operational from 7 October 1998. MIVILUDES, established in 2002, subsumed some of their operations. FECRIS (Fédération Européenne des Centres de Recherche et d'Information sur le Sectarisme), European Federation of Centres of Research and Information on Sectarianism, operates in France and serves as an umbrella organization for anti-cult work throughout Europe. MIVILUDES has been criticized for the broad scope of its list of cults, which included both non-religious organizations and criteria for inclusion which Bishop Jean Vernette, the national secretary of the French episcopate to the study of cults and new religious movements, said could be applied to almost all religions.[42] MIVILUDES officials are under the French Ministry of the Interior as of January 2020.[43] The About-Picard law against sects and cultic influence that "undermine human rights and fundamental freedoms" as well as mental manipulation was established in 2001.[44]

United Kingdom edit

In the UK, MP Paul Rose established the first major British anti-cult group called FAIR (Family Action Information and Rescue/Resource) in 1976.[45] In 1987, Ian Haworth founded the Cult Information Centre.[46] Other groups like Deo Gloria Trust, Reachout Trust, Catalyst, People's Organised Workshop on Ersatz Religion, and Cultists Anonymous also grew during the 1970s and 1980s.[47][45][10]

In 1968, after a large movement from the public to investigate Scientology's effects on the health and well-being of its adherents, Minister of Health Kenneth Robinson implemented measures to prevent the immigration of foreign and Commonwealth Scientologists into the United Kingdom.[48][49] One measure was the automatic denial of student visa applications for foreign nationals seeking to study at Hubbard College at East Grinstead or any other Scientological educational institution. Additionally, work permits to foreign nationals seeking employment in Scientology establishments were restricted.[50][51] These measures were lifted in 1980 after a 1971 investigation headed by John G. Foster believed that the "Scientology ban" was unfair.[52] Despite this investigation, the European Court of Justice ruled that the United Kingdom was entitled to refuse the right of entry to nationals of European Union member states seeking employment in Scientology establishments.[53] Sociologist Eileen Barker believes that three reasons led to the lifting of the "ban": (1) it was unenforceable, (2) it was hard to defend before the European Court of Human Rights, and (3) it was unfair since it was the only new religious movement that received such treatment.[53] In 1999, the Church of Scientology attempted to obtain charitable status through the Charity Commission of England and Wales, but their application was rejected and the Church did not appeal the decision.[54] In 2013, the UK Supreme Court ruled that the Scientology chapel in London was a "place of meeting for religious worship" that could be registered as a place of marriage to the Registrar General of Births, Deaths and Marriages.[54]

Austria edit

In Austria, the anti-cult movement is represented by GSK (Gesellschaft gegen Sekten und Kultgefahren), renamed in 1992 from the Association for Mental Health (Verein zur Wahrung der geistigen Freiheit), founded by psychologist Brigitte Rollett on September 29, 1977, engaged in an information campaign against religious minorities and new religious movements.[55] GSK is a declared member of FECRIS.[41] Between 1992 and 2008, GSK was funded by the state government of the city of Vienna.[55] According to the HRWF report, further financing from the funds of the state government of Lower Austria is non-transparent.[55]

Czech Republic edit

The Society for the Study of Sects and New Religious Direction (Společnost pro studium sekt a nových náboženských směrů), which is considered by religionists to be an anti-cult movement, has been operating in the Czech Republic since 1993.[56][57]

Finland edit

In Finland from 1993 operates organisation U.U.T. (Uskontojen uhrien tuki), Support Group for the Victims of Religions, which is a FECRIS member.[41]

Australia edit

Australia's anti-cult movement began in the 1970s with the introduction of NRMs like Scientology and the Unification Church. Deprogrammings occurred throughout the 1970s and 1980s that resulted in numerous lawsuits resulting in a national transition away from deprogramming and toward exit counseling.[58] In 2010, independent Senator Nick Xenophon attempted to enact legislation against NRMs – though primarily against the Church of Scientology and their tax-exempt status – similar to those in France. However, his efforts were unsuccessful.[59]

Australia's main anti-cult organization is Cult Information and Family Support (CIFS), run by exit counselor Tore Klevjer.[60] It was founded by Ros Hodgkins, David Richardson, and nineteen others in 1996.[61][62][63] CIFS combats NRMs as well as lifestyle coaches and multi-level marketing schemes;[63] The Advertiser wrote in 2017 that it also represents ex-NRM members.[64] Other groups like Cult Counselling Australia (formed in 1991[65]) exist in Australia to provide exit counseling and educational services.

Russia edit

In Russia anti-cultism appeared in the early 1990s since the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the 1991 August Coup. Some Russian Protestants criticized foreign missionaries, sects, and new religious movements. They hoped that taking part in anti-cult declarations could demonstrate that they were not "sectarians."[66] Some scholars have shown that anti-cult movements, especially with support of the government, can provoke serious religious conflicts in Russian society.[67] In 2008 the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs prepared a list of "extremist groups." At the top of the list were Islamic groups outside of "traditional Islam" (which is supervised by the Russian government); next were "Pagan cults."[68] In 2009 the Russian Ministry of Justice set up a council called the Council of Experts Conducting State Religious Studies Expert Analysis. The new council listed 80 large sects which it considered potentially dangerous to Russian society and mentioned that there were thousands of smaller ones.[66] Large sects listed included the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Jehovah's Witnesses, and what were called "neo-Pentecostals."[69]

China edit

China's modern anti-cult movement began in the late 1990s with the development of qigong groups, primarily Falun Gong. Anti-cult campaigns in the late twentieth century and early twenty-first centuries were founded on "scientific rationality and civilization," according to medical anthropologist Nancy N. Chen.[70] Chinese authorities claimed that by July 2001 that Falun Gong specifically was responsible for over 1,600 deaths through induced suicide by hanging, self-immolation, drownings, among others and the murders of practitioners' relatives.[71] Chinese authorities adopted the negative term "xié jiào" (邪教) to refer to new religious movements. It is roughly translated by "evil cult," but the term dates as far back as the seventh century CE with various meanings.[72]

About 10,000 Falun Gong protestors on 25 April 1999 demonstrated around Zhongnanhai, the seat of the Chinese Communist Party and State Council, to recognize Falun Gong as a legitimate form of spirituality.[73] In response, Beijing specifically labeled Falun Gong an illegal religious organization which violated the People's Republic of China's Constitution in May 1999.[74] On 22 July 1999, the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress specifically banned Falun Gong.[75] On 30 October 1999, the Standing Committee enacted a law that required courts, police, and prosecutors to prosecute "cult" activity generally.[76]

Japan edit

Japan's modern anti-cult movement began in the 1980s when numerous groups – though primarily the Unification Church – began soliciting "spiritual sales" from new converts or people on the street.[77] A lawyer's organization called the National Network of Lawyers Against Spiritual Sales (NNLASS) was formed to combat these "spiritual sales" and supposedly forced donations. According to NNLASS, the group received over 34,000 complaints about "spiritual sales" and forced donations by 2021 totaling to about 123.7 billion yen (US$902 million).[78] According to Yoshihide Sakurai, Japanese courts originally would require religious groups to return large donations if the person never joined the group, but once the person joined the group, their "spiritual sale" was made completely within their own free will and should not be returned. However, lawyers argued that if the person was forced to make a donation, then they were not making it out of their free will and thus their donation or sale should be returned.[79]: 33  Based on a 2006 Tokyo District Court decision, the circumstances of whether or not the Unification Church used illegal recruiting or donation soliciting tactics were to be determined on a case-by-case basis, which was upheld by a 2007 appeal.[79]: 33–34 

In 1995, Aum Shinrikyo, a Japanese new religious movement, attacked a Tokyo subway with sarin gas, killing 14 people and injuring about 1,000. After this incident, mainstream Japanese society faced their "cult problem" directly.[79]: 30  Various anti-cult groups – many of them local – emerged from the publicity of the "Aum Affair." One of which is the Japan De-Culting Council (日本脱カルト研究会) on 11 November 1995.[80] It was founded by lawyers, psychologists, academics, and other interested parties like ex-NRM members.[81] It changed its name to the Japan Society for Cult Prevention and Recovery [ja] in April 2004.

In 1989, Tsutsumi Sakamoto was an anti-cult lawyer working on a civil case against Aum Shinrikyo. At approximately 3:00 a.m. JST (UTC+9:00), several members of Aum Shinrikyo entered Sakamoto's apartment in Yokohama. He, his wife, Satoko, and his 14-month-old son, Tatsuhiko, were all killed. In the aftermath of the Aum Affair in 1995, some Aum Shinrikyo members and one former member in September 1995 tipped off Japanese police about the general location of the bodies of the three victims, which were scattered to complicate search efforts.[82]

On 8 July 2022, Tetsuya Yamagami allegedly assassinated former Prime Minister of Japan Shinzo Abe. Upon his immediate arrest, Yamagami testified that he was driven by Abe's relationship with the Unification Church. Yamagami's mother made large donations to the Unification Church that bankrupted their family.[83] Yamagami's uncle reported that the mother's donations totaled to 100 million yen (US$720,000).[84] This incident brought renewed attention to the social issues related to cults in Japan, which include the questionable religious meddling in state politics, fraudulent fundraising in the name of religion, and the welfare of shūkyō nisei (children of religious family).[85]

Controversies edit

Polarized views among scholars edit

Social scientists, sociologists, religious studies scholars, psychologists and psychiatrists have studied the modern field of "cults" and new religious movements since the early 1970s. Debates about certain purported cults and about cults in general often become polarized with widely divergent opinions, not only among current followers and disaffected former members, but among scholars as well. Most academics agree that some groups have become problematic or very problematic but disagree over the extent to which new religious movements in general cause harm.[86] For example, Bryan R. Wilson, an expert on new religious movements, argued that the Bruderhof Communities are not a cult similar to Jonestown, the Branch Davidians, Solar Temple, Aum Shinrikyo and Heaven's Gate.[87]

Scholars in the field of new religious movements confront many controversial subjects:

Brainwashing and mind-control edit

Over the years various controversial theories of conversion and member retention have been proposed that link mind control to NRMs, and particularly those religious movements referred to as "cults" by their critics. These theories resemble the original political brainwashing theories first developed by the CIA as a propaganda device to combat communism,[106] with some minor changes. Philip Zimbardo discusses mind control as "the process by which individual or collective freedom of choice and action is compromised by agents or agencies that modify or distort perception, motivation, affect, cognition and/or behavioral outcomes,"[107] and he suggests that any human being is susceptible to such manipulation.[108] In a 1999 book, Robert Lifton also applied his original ideas about thought reform to Aum Shinrikyo, concluding that in this context thought reform was possible without violence or physical coercion.[109] Margaret Singer, who also spent time studying the political brainwashing of Korean prisoners of war, agreed with this conclusion: in her book Cults in Our Midst she describes six conditions which would create an atmosphere in which thought reform is possible.[110]

James T. Richardson observes that if the NRMs had access to powerful brainwashing techniques, one would expect that NRMs would have high growth rates, yet in fact most have not had notable success in recruitment. Most adherents participate for only a short time, and the success in retaining members is limited.[111] For this and other reasons, sociologists of religion including David G. Bromley and Anson D. Shupe consider the idea that cults are brainwashing American youth to be "implausible."[112] In addition to Bromley, Thomas Robbins, Dick Anthony, Eileen Barker, Newton Maloney, Massimo Introvigne, John Hall, Lorne L. Dawson, Anson D. Shupe, J. Gordon Melton, Marc Galanter, Saul Levine of Mount Wilson FM Broadcasters, Inc, among other scholars researching NRMs, have argued and established to the satisfaction of courts, relevant professional associations and scientific communities that there exists no scientific theory, generally accepted and based upon methodologically sound research, that supports the brainwashing theories as advanced by the anti-cult movement.[113][103]

Deprogramming and exit counseling edit

Some members of the secular opposition to cults and to some new religious movements have argued that if brainwashing has deprived a person of their free will, treatment to restore their free will should take place, even if the "victim" opposes this. Precedents for this exist in the treatment of certain mental illnesses: in such cases medical and legal authorities recognize the condition as depriving sufferers of their ability to make appropriate decisions for themselves. But the practice of forcing treatment on a presumed victim of "brainwashing" (one definition of "deprogramming") has constantly proven controversial. Human-rights organizations (including the ACLU and Human Rights Watch) have criticized deprogramming.[114][115] While only a small fraction of the anti-cult movement has had involvement in deprogramming, several deprogrammers (including a deprogramming pioneer, Ted Patrick) have served prison terms for acts sometimes associated with deprogramming including kidnapping, while courts have acquitted others.[38][116]

Responses of targeted groups and scholars edit

In 2005, the Hate Crimes Unit of the Edmonton Police Service confiscated anti-Falun Gong materials distributed at the annual conference of the ICSA by staff members of the Chinese Consulate in Calgary.[117]

Failure of nomenclature edit

An article on the categorization of new religious movements in US media criticizes the print media for failing to recognize social-scientific efforts in the area of new religious movements and its tendency to use anti-cultist definitions rather than social-scientific insight. It asserts that the "failure of the print media to recognize social-scientific efforts in the area of religious movement organizations ... impels us to add yet another failing mark to the media report card."[118]

See also edit

References edit

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  118. ^ van Driel, Barend; Richardson, James T (1988). "Research Note Categorization of New Religious Movements in American Print Media". Sociological Analysis. 49 (2): 171–183. doi:10.2307/3711011. JSTOR 3711011. Rarely was an attempt made to define these arbitrarily applied concepts, and on the occasions when this did take place, anti-cultist definitions were much more prevalent than social-scientific insights. Furthermore, merely by adopting the concept "cult" as a descriptive category, NRMs were, willingly or not, condemned to occupy a position in the same category of groups that includes the People's Temple, the Manson Family, and other marginal movements which evoke public fear and horror. ... A great deal of effort has been expended within the social-scientific tradition to unravel the complexities of marginal religious organizations. Unfortunately it seems that the message is somehow totally lost to the majority of those employed by the major print media. Because of the level of professionalism that characterizes the staff of the newspapers and news weeklies in our sample, it can be expected that the situation is even worse among the more local and popular media, as can be deduced from the findings of Bromley et al. (1979). They note, for instance, that most anti-cult oriented stories were printed in small community newspapers. The failure of the print media to recognize social-scientific efforts in the area of religious movement organizations (as our previous research [van Driel and Richardson, 1985] also shows) impels us to add yet another failing mark to the media report card Weiss (1985) has constructed to assess the media's reporting of the social sciences.

Further reading edit

  • Amitrani, Alberto and Raffaella di Marzio. "'Mind Control' in New Religious Movements and the American Psychological Association," Cultic Studies Journal 17, (2000): 101–121.
  • Anthony, Dick "Pseudoscience and Minority Religions: An Evaluation of the Brainwashing Theories of Jean-Marie Abgrall." Social Justice Research 12, no. 4 (1999): 421–456.
  • Arweck, Elisabeth. Researching New Religious Movements: Responses and Redefinitions. London and New York: Routledge, 2006.
  • Barker, Eileen. The Making of a Moonie: Choice or Brainwashing?. 1984. Reprint, Oxford and Cambridge, MA: Basil Blackwell, 1989.
  • Barker, Eileen. New Religious Movements: A Practical Introduction. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1989.
  • Beckford, James A. Cult Controversies: The Societal Response to New Religious Movements. London: Tavistock, 1985. ISBN 978-0422796408
  • Bromley, David G. and Anson Shupe. "Anti-cultism in the United States: Origins, Ideology, and Organizational Development." Social Compass 42, no. 2 (1995): 221–236.
  • Bromley, David G. and Anson Shupe. "Public Reaction against New Religious Movements." In Cults and New Religious Movements: A Report of the Committee on Psychiatry and Religion of the American Psychiatric Association, edited by Marc Galanter. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association, 1989. ISBN 0890422125
  • Bromley, David G. and Anson Shupe. Strange Gods: The Great American Cult Scare. Boston: Beacon Press, 1981.
  • Bromley, David G., Anson Shupe, and J. C. Ventimiglia. "Atrocity Tales, the Unification Church, and the Social Construction of Evil." Journal of Communication 29, no. 3 (1979): 42–53.
  • Bromley. David G. and James T. Richardson, eds. The Brainwashing/Deprogramming Controversy: Sociological, Psychological, Legal and Historical Perspectives. Studies in Religion and Society. Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 1983.
  • Chryssides, George D. Exploring New Religions. London and New York: Continuum, 1999.
  • Cowan, Douglas E. Bearing False Witness?: An Introduction to the Christian Countercult. London and Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003.
  • Cowan, Douglas E. "Exits and Migrations: Foregrounding the Christian Countercult." Journal of Contemporary Religion 17, no. 3 (2002): 339–354.
  • Cresswell, Jamie and Bryan Wilson, eds. New Religious Movements: Changes and Responses. London and New York: Routledge, 1999.
  • Halperin, David A., ed. Psychodynamic Perspectives on Religion, Sect, and Cult. Boston, Bristol, and London: John Wright and PSG, 1983.
  • Kaplan, Jeffrey. "The Anti-Cult Movement in America: An History of Cultural Perspective." Syzygy 2, no. 1 (1993): 267–296.
  • Kelly, Aidan A., ed. The Evangelical Christian Anti-Cult Movement: Christian Counter-Cult Literature. Cults and New Religions: Sources for Study of Nonconventional Religious Groups in Nineteenth-and-Twentieth-Century America. New York and London: Garland, 1990.
  • Lalich, Janja. Bounded Choice: True Believers and Charismatic Cults. London, Los Angeles, and Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004.
  • Lalich, Janja and Karla McLaren. Escaping Utopia: Growing Up in a Cult, Getting Out, and Starting Over. New York and Oxford: Routledge, 2018.
  • Langone, Michael. "Cults, Psychological Manipulation, and Society: International Perspectives – An Overview." Paper presented at American Family Foundation Annual Conference at University of Minnesota, 14 May 1999. Published digitally and archived on (retrieved 29 May 2022).
  • Langone, Michael. "On Dialogue Between the Two Tribes of Cultic Researchers." Cultic Studies Newsletter 2, no. 1 (1983): 11–15.
  • Langone, Michael D., ed. Recovery From Cults: Help for Victims of Psychological and Spiritual Abuse. London and New York: W. W. Norton and American Family Foundation, 1993. ISBN 0393313212
  • Langone, Michael. "Secular and Religious Critiques of Cults: Complementary Visions, Not Irresolvable Conflicts." Cultic Studies Journal 12, no. 2 (1995): 166–186.
  • Lifton, Robert Jay. Losing Reality: On Cults, Cultism, and the Mindset of Political and Religious Zealotry. London and New York: The New Press, 2019.
  • Lifton, Robert Jay. Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism: A Study of "Brainwashing" in China. 1961. Reprint, London and Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1989.
  • Robbins, Thomas. "'Quo Vadis' the Scientific Study of New Religious Movements?" Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 39, no. 4 (2000): 515–523.
  • Robbin, Thomas and Dick Anthony, "Cults in the late Twentieth Century" in Encyclopedia of the American Religious Experience: Studies of Traditions and Movements, edited by Charles H. Lippy and Peter W. Williams. Vol. 2. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1988. ISBN 0684188619
  • Shupe, Anson D. and David G. Bromley. A Documentary History of the Anti-Cult Movement. Arlington, TX: Center for Social Research, University of Texas, 1985.
  • Shupe, Anson D. and David G. Bromley, eds. Anti-Cult Movements in Cross-Cultural Perspective. Religious Information Systems. London and New York: Garland, 1994.
  • Shupe, Anson D., David G. Bromley, Donna L. Oliver. The Anti-Cult Movement in America: A Bibliography and Historical Survey. Edited by J. Gordon Melton. Garland Reference Library of Social Science. New York: Garland, 1984.
  • Wilson, Bryan R., Apostates and New Religious Movements. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994.
  • Zablocki, Benjamin David and Thomas Robbins, eds. Misunderstanding Cults: Searching for Objectivity in A Controversial Field. Toronto, London, and Buffalo, NY: University of Toronto Press, 2001.

anti, cult, movement, countercult, redirects, here, confused, with, counterculture, anticult, redirects, here, music, album, anticult, album, anti, cult, movement, abbreviated, also, known, countercult, movement, consists, various, governmental, governmental, . Countercult redirects here Not to be confused with Counterculture Anticult redirects here For the music album see Anticult album The anti cult movement abbreviated ACM and also known as the countercult movement 1 consists of various governmental and non governmental organizations and individuals that seek to raise awareness of cults uncover coercive practices used to attract and retain members and help those who have become involved with harmful cult practices One prominent group within the anti cult movement Christian counter cult organizations oppose new religious movements on theological grounds categorizing them as cults and distribute information to this effect through church networks and via printed literature 2 Contents 1 Concept 1 1 Religious and secular critics 1 2 Hadden s taxonomy of the anti cult movement 2 Cult watching groups and individuals and other opposition to cults 2 1 Family members of adherents 2 2 Clinical psychologists and psychiatrists 2 3 Former members 2 4 Christian countercult movement 2 5 Governmental opposition 3 National or regional anti cult movements 3 1 United States 3 2 Europe 3 2 1 France 3 2 2 United Kingdom 3 2 3 Austria 3 2 4 Czech Republic 3 2 5 Finland 3 3 Australia 3 4 Russia 3 5 China 3 6 Japan 4 Controversies 4 1 Polarized views among scholars 4 2 Brainwashing and mind control 4 3 Deprogramming and exit counseling 4 4 Responses of targeted groups and scholars 4 5 Failure of nomenclature 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingConcept editThe anti cult movement is conceptualized as a collection of individuals and groups whether formally organized or not who oppose some new religious movements or cults This countermovement has reportedly recruited participants from family members of cultists former group members or apostates religious groups including Jewish and Christian groups 3 and associations of health professionals 4 5 Although there is a trend towards globalization 6 the social and organizational bases vary significantly from country to country according to the social and political opportunity structures in each place 7 As with many subjects in the social sciences the movement is variously defined A significant minority opinion suggests that analysis should treat the secular anti cult movement separately from the religiously motivated mainly Christian groups 8 9 The anti cult movement might be divided into four classes secular counter cult groups Christian evangelical counter cult groups groups formed to counter a specific cult and organizations that offer some form of exit counseling 10 Most if not all of the groups involved express the view that there are potentially deleterious effects associated with some new religious movements 11 Religious and secular critics edit Commentators differentiate two main types of opposition to cults religious opposition related to theological issues secular opposition related to emotional social financial and economic consequences of cult involvement where cult can refer to a religious or to a secular group Hadden s taxonomy of the anti cult movement edit Jeffrey K Hadden sees four distinct classes of opposition to cults 12 Opposition grounded on religion Opposition usually defined in theological terms Cults considered heretical Endeavors to expose the heresy and correct the beliefs of those who have strayed from a truth Prefers metaphors of deception rather than possession Serves two important functions protects members especially youth from heresy and increases solidarity among the faithful Secular opposition Regards individual autonomy as the manifest goal achieved by getting people out of groups that use mind control and deceptive proselytization Regards the struggle as an issue of control rather than theology Organizes around families of children currently or previously involved in a cult Has the unannounced goal of disabling or destroying NRMs organizationally Apostates Former members who consider themselves egregiously wronged by a cult often with the coordination and encouragement of anti cult groups Entrepreneurial opposition A few entrepreneurs who have made careers of organizing opposition groups Broadcasters journalists and lawyers who base a reputation or career on anti cult activities Cult watching groups and individuals and other opposition to cults editFamily members of adherents edit Some opposition to cults and to some NRMs started with family members of cult adherents who had problems with the sudden changes in character lifestyle and future plans of their young adult children who had joined NRMs Ted Patrick widely known as the father of deprogramming exemplifies members of this group The former Cult Awareness Network old CAN grew out of a grassroots movement by parents of cult members 13 The American Family Foundation today update the International Cultic Studies Association originated from a father whose daughter had joined a high control group and other parents concerned about young adult offspring populated the American Family Foundation s membership 14 Clinical psychologists and psychiatrists edit From the 1970s onwards some psychiatrists and clinical psychologists accused cults of harming some of their members 15 16 These accusations were sometimes based on observations made during therapy and sometimes were related to theories regarding brainwashing or mind control 17 Former members edit See also Apostasy in alleged cults and new religious movements Anson Shupe David G Bromley and Joseph Ventimiglia coined the term atrocity tales in 1979 18 which Bryan R Wilson later took up in relation to former members narratives Bromley and Shupe defined an atrocity tale as the symbolic presentation of action or events real or imagined in such a context that they come to flagrantly violate the presumably shared premises upon which a given set of social relationships should take place The recounting of such tales has the intention of reaffirming normative boundaries By sharing the reporter s disapproval or horror an audience reasserts normative prescription and clearly locates the violator beyond the limits of public morality 19 20 Christian countercult movement edit Main article Christian countercult movement In the 1940s the long held opposition by some established Christian denominations to non Christian religions or supposedly heretical or counterfeit Christian sects crystallized into a more organized Christian counter cult movement in the United States For those belonging to the movement all religious groups claiming to be Christian but deemed outside of Christian orthodoxy were considered cults 21 Christian cults are new religious movements which have a Christian background but are considered to be theologically deviant by members of other Christian churches 22 In his influential book The Kingdom of the Cults first published in the United States in 1965 Christian scholar Walter Martin defines Christian cults as groups that follow the personal interpretation of an individual rather than the understanding of the Bible accepted by mainstream Christianity He mentions the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Christian Science the Jehovah s Witnesses Unitarian Universalism and Unity as examples 23 The Christian countercult movement asserts that Christian sects whose beliefs are partially or wholly not in accordance with the Bible are erroneous It also states that a religious sect can be considered a cult if its beliefs involve a denial of what they view as any of the essential Christian teachings such as salvation the Trinity Jesus himself as a person the ministry of Jesus the Miracles of Jesus the Crucifixion of Jesus the Death of Christ the Resurrection of Christ the Second Coming of Christ and the Rapture 24 25 26 Countercult literature usually expresses doctrinal or theological concerns and a missionary or apologetic purpose 27 It presents a rebuttal by emphasizing the teachings of the Bible against the beliefs of non fundamental Christian sects Christian countercult activist writers also emphasize the need for Christians to evangelize to followers of cults 28 29 30 Governmental opposition edit Further information Governmental lists of cults and sects The secular opposition to cults and new religious movements operates internationally though a number of sizable and sometimes expanding groups originated in the United States Some European countries such as France Germany Belgium and Switzerland have introduced legislation or taken other measures against cults or cultic deviations In the Netherlands cults sects and new religious movements have the same legal rights as larger and more mainstream religious movements 31 As of 2004 the Netherlands do not have an anti cult movement of any significance 32 National or regional anti cult movements editUnited States edit See also Ted Patrick Cult Awareness Network and International Cultic Studies Association The first organized opposition to new religions in the United States appeared in 1971 with the formation of FREECOG Parents Committee to Free Our Sons and Daughters from the Children of God 33 34 In 1973 FREECOG renamed itself as the Volunteer Parents of America and then the Citizens Freedom Foundation CFF before becoming the Cult Awareness Network CAN in 1984 13 In 1979 another anti cult group the American Family Foundation AFF was founded which is now the International Cultic Studies Association it began organizing annual conferences launched an information phone line and published the Cult Observer and the Cultic Studies Journal 14 In 1996 CAN was sued for its involvement in the deprogramming of a member of the United Pentecostal Church International named Jason Scott 35 Other parties joined the lawsuit and this bankrupted the organization A group which included a number of Scientologists purchased the Cult Awareness Network name and formed the New Cult Awareness Network 36 In the 1970s and 1980s American anti cultist and deprogrammer Ted Patrick was charged at least thirteen times and convicted at least three times for kidnapping and unlawful imprisonment for his deprogramming activities 37 38 In 1980 Patrick was convicted of conspiracy false imprisonment and kidnapping of Roberta McElfish a waitress in Tucson Arizona after accepting US 7 500 from her family to deprogram her 38 Europe edit In the European Union the FECRIS Federation Europeenne des Centres de Recherche et d Information sur le Sectarisme English European Federation of Centres of Research and Information on Sectarianism organization has been active since 1994 as an umbrella for European organizations investigating the activities of groups labeled to be cults or sects 39 The European Coordination for Freedom of Conscience a participating organization in the EU Fundamental Rights Platform issued a report on FECRIS in 2014 describing the differences between how the organization describes itself and what its key figures actually do and say It summarized that activities of FECRIS constitute a contravention of the principles of respect and tolerance of beliefs and is in direct opposition to the principles of the European Convention on Human Rights and other international human rights instruments 40 In 2015 FECRIS published a list of its member organizations personalities and correspondents 41 France edit See also About Picard law MIVILUDES and Centre contre les manipulations mentales Anti cult organizations in France have included the Centre Roger Ikor 1981 and MILS Mission interministerielle de lutte contre les sectes English Interministerial Mission in the Fight Against Cults operational from 7 October 1998 MIVILUDES established in 2002 subsumed some of their operations FECRIS Federation Europeenne des Centres de Recherche et d Information sur le Sectarisme European Federation of Centres of Research and Information on Sectarianism operates in France and serves as an umbrella organization for anti cult work throughout Europe MIVILUDES has been criticized for the broad scope of its list of cults which included both non religious organizations and criteria for inclusion which Bishop Jean Vernette the national secretary of the French episcopate to the study of cults and new religious movements said could be applied to almost all religions 42 MIVILUDES officials are under the French Ministry of the Interior as of January 2020 43 The About Picard law against sects and cultic influence that undermine human rights and fundamental freedoms as well as mental manipulation was established in 2001 44 United Kingdom edit See also The Family Survival Trust Cult Information Centre and Reachout Trust In the UK MP Paul Rose established the first major British anti cult group called FAIR Family Action Information and Rescue Resource in 1976 45 In 1987 Ian Haworth founded the Cult Information Centre 46 Other groups like Deo Gloria Trust Reachout Trust Catalyst People s Organised Workshop on Ersatz Religion and Cultists Anonymous also grew during the 1970s and 1980s 47 45 10 In 1968 after a large movement from the public to investigate Scientology s effects on the health and well being of its adherents Minister of Health Kenneth Robinson implemented measures to prevent the immigration of foreign and Commonwealth Scientologists into the United Kingdom 48 49 One measure was the automatic denial of student visa applications for foreign nationals seeking to study at Hubbard College at East Grinstead or any other Scientological educational institution Additionally work permits to foreign nationals seeking employment in Scientology establishments were restricted 50 51 These measures were lifted in 1980 after a 1971 investigation headed by John G Foster believed that the Scientology ban was unfair 52 Despite this investigation the European Court of Justice ruled that the United Kingdom was entitled to refuse the right of entry to nationals of European Union member states seeking employment in Scientology establishments 53 Sociologist Eileen Barker believes that three reasons led to the lifting of the ban 1 it was unenforceable 2 it was hard to defend before the European Court of Human Rights and 3 it was unfair since it was the only new religious movement that received such treatment 53 In 1999 the Church of Scientology attempted to obtain charitable status through the Charity Commission of England and Wales but their application was rejected and the Church did not appeal the decision 54 In 2013 the UK Supreme Court ruled that the Scientology chapel in London was a place of meeting for religious worship that could be registered as a place of marriage to the Registrar General of Births Deaths and Marriages 54 Austria edit In Austria the anti cult movement is represented by GSK Gesellschaft gegen Sekten und Kultgefahren renamed in 1992 from the Association for Mental Health Verein zur Wahrung der geistigen Freiheit founded by psychologist Brigitte Rollett on September 29 1977 engaged in an information campaign against religious minorities and new religious movements 55 GSK is a declared member of FECRIS 41 Between 1992 and 2008 GSK was funded by the state government of the city of Vienna 55 According to the HRWF report further financing from the funds of the state government of Lower Austria is non transparent 55 Czech Republic edit The Society for the Study of Sects and New Religious Direction Spolecnost pro studium sekt a novych nabozenskych smeru which is considered by religionists to be an anti cult movement has been operating in the Czech Republic since 1993 56 57 Finland edit In Finland from 1993 operates organisation U U T Uskontojen uhrien tuki Support Group for the Victims of Religions which is a FECRIS member 41 Australia edit See also Nick Xenophon Stephen Mutch and Jan Groenveld Australia s anti cult movement began in the 1970s with the introduction of NRMs like Scientology and the Unification Church Deprogrammings occurred throughout the 1970s and 1980s that resulted in numerous lawsuits resulting in a national transition away from deprogramming and toward exit counseling 58 In 2010 independent Senator Nick Xenophon attempted to enact legislation against NRMs though primarily against the Church of Scientology and their tax exempt status similar to those in France However his efforts were unsuccessful 59 Australia s main anti cult organization is Cult Information and Family Support CIFS run by exit counselor Tore Klevjer 60 It was founded by Ros Hodgkins David Richardson and nineteen others in 1996 61 62 63 CIFS combats NRMs as well as lifestyle coaches and multi level marketing schemes 63 The Advertiser wrote in 2017 that it also represents ex NRM members 64 Other groups like Cult Counselling Australia formed in 1991 65 exist in Australia to provide exit counseling and educational services Russia edit See also Center for Religious Studies in the name of Hieromartyr Irenaeus of Lyons and Alexander Dvorkin In Russia anti cultism appeared in the early 1990s since the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the 1991 August Coup Some Russian Protestants criticized foreign missionaries sects and new religious movements They hoped that taking part in anti cult declarations could demonstrate that they were not sectarians 66 Some scholars have shown that anti cult movements especially with support of the government can provoke serious religious conflicts in Russian society 67 In 2008 the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs prepared a list of extremist groups At the top of the list were Islamic groups outside of traditional Islam which is supervised by the Russian government next were Pagan cults 68 In 2009 the Russian Ministry of Justice set up a council called the Council of Experts Conducting State Religious Studies Expert Analysis The new council listed 80 large sects which it considered potentially dangerous to Russian society and mentioned that there were thousands of smaller ones 66 Large sects listed included the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Jehovah s Witnesses and what were called neo Pentecostals 69 China edit Main articles Persecution of Falun Gong Antireligious campaigns of the Chinese Communist Party and Heterodox teachings Chinese law China s modern anti cult movement began in the late 1990s with the development of qigong groups primarily Falun Gong Anti cult campaigns in the late twentieth century and early twenty first centuries were founded on scientific rationality and civilization according to medical anthropologist Nancy N Chen 70 Chinese authorities claimed that by July 2001 that Falun Gong specifically was responsible for over 1 600 deaths through induced suicide by hanging self immolation drownings among others and the murders of practitioners relatives 71 Chinese authorities adopted the negative term xie jiao 邪教 to refer to new religious movements It is roughly translated by evil cult but the term dates as far back as the seventh century CE with various meanings 72 About 10 000 Falun Gong protestors on 25 April 1999 demonstrated around Zhongnanhai the seat of the Chinese Communist Party and State Council to recognize Falun Gong as a legitimate form of spirituality 73 In response Beijing specifically labeled Falun Gong an illegal religious organization which violated the People s Republic of China s Constitution in May 1999 74 On 22 July 1999 the Standing Committee of the National People s Congress specifically banned Falun Gong 75 On 30 October 1999 the Standing Committee enacted a law that required courts police and prosecutors to prosecute cult activity generally 76 Japan edit See also Unification Church Aum Shinrikyo and National Network of Lawyers Against Spiritual Sales Japan s modern anti cult movement began in the 1980s when numerous groups though primarily the Unification Church began soliciting spiritual sales from new converts or people on the street 77 A lawyer s organization called the National Network of Lawyers Against Spiritual Sales NNLASS was formed to combat these spiritual sales and supposedly forced donations According to NNLASS the group received over 34 000 complaints about spiritual sales and forced donations by 2021 totaling to about 123 7 billion yen US 902 million 78 According to Yoshihide Sakurai Japanese courts originally would require religious groups to return large donations if the person never joined the group but once the person joined the group their spiritual sale was made completely within their own free will and should not be returned However lawyers argued that if the person was forced to make a donation then they were not making it out of their free will and thus their donation or sale should be returned 79 33 Based on a 2006 Tokyo District Court decision the circumstances of whether or not the Unification Church used illegal recruiting or donation soliciting tactics were to be determined on a case by case basis which was upheld by a 2007 appeal 79 33 34 In 1995 Aum Shinrikyo a Japanese new religious movement attacked a Tokyo subway with sarin gas killing 14 people and injuring about 1 000 After this incident mainstream Japanese society faced their cult problem directly 79 30 Various anti cult groups many of them local emerged from the publicity of the Aum Affair One of which is the Japan De Culting Council 日本脱カルト研究会 on 11 November 1995 80 It was founded by lawyers psychologists academics and other interested parties like ex NRM members 81 It changed its name to the Japan Society for Cult Prevention and Recovery ja in April 2004 In 1989 Tsutsumi Sakamoto was an anti cult lawyer working on a civil case against Aum Shinrikyo At approximately 3 00 a m JST UTC 9 00 several members of Aum Shinrikyo entered Sakamoto s apartment in Yokohama He his wife Satoko and his 14 month old son Tatsuhiko were all killed In the aftermath of the Aum Affair in 1995 some Aum Shinrikyo members and one former member in September 1995 tipped off Japanese police about the general location of the bodies of the three victims which were scattered to complicate search efforts 82 On 8 July 2022 Tetsuya Yamagami allegedly assassinated former Prime Minister of Japan Shinzo Abe Upon his immediate arrest Yamagami testified that he was driven by Abe s relationship with the Unification Church Yamagami s mother made large donations to the Unification Church that bankrupted their family 83 Yamagami s uncle reported that the mother s donations totaled to 100 million yen US 720 000 84 This incident brought renewed attention to the social issues related to cults in Japan which include the questionable religious meddling in state politics fraudulent fundraising in the name of religion and the welfare of shukyō nisei children of religious family 85 Controversies editPolarized views among scholars edit Social scientists sociologists religious studies scholars psychologists and psychiatrists have studied the modern field of cults and new religious movements since the early 1970s Debates about certain purported cults and about cults in general often become polarized with widely divergent opinions not only among current followers and disaffected former members but among scholars as well Most academics agree that some groups have become problematic or very problematic but disagree over the extent to which new religious movements in general cause harm 86 For example Bryan R Wilson an expert on new religious movements argued that the Bruderhof Communities are not a cult similar to Jonestown the Branch Davidians Solar Temple Aum Shinrikyo and Heaven s Gate 87 Scholars in the field of new religious movements confront many controversial subjects The validity of the testimonies of former members 88 89 18 The validity of the testimonies of current members 90 The validity of and differences between exit counseling and coercive deprogramming 91 92 The validity of evidence of harm caused by cults 93 94 95 Ethical concerns regarding new religious movements for example free will and freedom of speech 96 Opposition to cults vs freedom of religion and religious intolerance 96 97 The objectivity of all scholars studying new religious movements 98 99 100 101 The acceptance or rejection of the APA Task Force on Deceptive and Indirect Methods of Persuasion and Control report and the brainwashing thesis generally 102 103 104 105 Brainwashing and mind control edit Further information Brainwashing Anti cult movement Over the years various controversial theories of conversion and member retention have been proposed that link mind control to NRMs and particularly those religious movements referred to as cults by their critics These theories resemble the original political brainwashing theories first developed by the CIA as a propaganda device to combat communism 106 with some minor changes Philip Zimbardo discusses mind control as the process by which individual or collective freedom of choice and action is compromised by agents or agencies that modify or distort perception motivation affect cognition and or behavioral outcomes 107 and he suggests that any human being is susceptible to such manipulation 108 In a 1999 book Robert Lifton also applied his original ideas about thought reform to Aum Shinrikyo concluding that in this context thought reform was possible without violence or physical coercion 109 Margaret Singer who also spent time studying the political brainwashing of Korean prisoners of war agreed with this conclusion in her book Cults in Our Midst she describes six conditions which would create an atmosphere in which thought reform is possible 110 James T Richardson observes that if the NRMs had access to powerful brainwashing techniques one would expect that NRMs would have high growth rates yet in fact most have not had notable success in recruitment Most adherents participate for only a short time and the success in retaining members is limited 111 For this and other reasons sociologists of religion including David G Bromley and Anson D Shupe consider the idea that cults are brainwashing American youth to be implausible 112 In addition to Bromley Thomas Robbins Dick Anthony Eileen Barker Newton Maloney Massimo Introvigne John Hall Lorne L Dawson Anson D Shupe J Gordon Melton Marc Galanter Saul Levine of Mount Wilson FM Broadcasters Inc among other scholars researching NRMs have argued and established to the satisfaction of courts relevant professional associations and scientific communities that there exists no scientific theory generally accepted and based upon methodologically sound research that supports the brainwashing theories as advanced by the anti cult movement 113 103 Deprogramming and exit counseling edit Further information Deprogramming and Exit counseling Some members of the secular opposition to cults and to some new religious movements have argued that if brainwashing has deprived a person of their free will treatment to restore their free will should take place even if the victim opposes this Precedents for this exist in the treatment of certain mental illnesses in such cases medical and legal authorities recognize the condition as depriving sufferers of their ability to make appropriate decisions for themselves But the practice of forcing treatment on a presumed victim of brainwashing one definition of deprogramming has constantly proven controversial Human rights organizations including the ACLU and Human Rights Watch have criticized deprogramming 114 115 While only a small fraction of the anti cult movement has had involvement in deprogramming several deprogrammers including a deprogramming pioneer Ted Patrick have served prison terms for acts sometimes associated with deprogramming including kidnapping while courts have acquitted others 38 116 Responses of targeted groups and scholars edit In 2005 the Hate Crimes Unit of the Edmonton Police Service confiscated anti Falun Gong materials distributed at the annual conference of the ICSA by staff members of the Chinese Consulate in Calgary 117 Failure of nomenclature edit An article on the categorization of new religious movements in US media criticizes the print media for failing to recognize social scientific efforts in the area of new religious movements and its tendency to use anti cultist definitions rather than social scientific insight It asserts that the failure of the print media to recognize social scientific efforts in the area of religious movement organizations impels us to add yet another failing mark to the media report card 118 See also edit nbsp Look up cult in Wiktionary the free dictionary Governmental lists of cults and sects Christian countercult movement Parliamentary Commission on Cults in France 1995 QAnon Anonymous podcast debunking QAnon the latter commonly referred to as a cult Religious persecutionReferences edit Philip Johnson et al Religious and Non Religious Spirituality in the Western World New Age In A New Vision a New Heart a Renewed Call edited by David Clayton et 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Freedom of Conscience European Coordination of Associations and Individuals for Freedom of Conscience 17 September 2014 Retrieved 10 April 2023 a b c Members fecris org 15 August 2015 Archived from the original on 15 August 2015 Retrieved 9 April 2023 Williams Elizabeth 4 May 2020 An In depth Look at the Negative Impact of the French Anti Cult Movement Curious Mind Magazine Retrieved 14 August 2022 Kheniche Ouafia 1 October 2019 Lutte contre les sectes la Miviludes va disparaitre France Inter in French Retrieved 14 August 2022 Hensley Jon 22 June 2000 Church attacks new French anti cult law The Guardian Retrieved 12 August 2022 a b George D Chryssides Britain s Anti cult movement In New Religious Movements Changes and Responses edited by Jamie Cresswell and Bryan Wilson 257 273 London and New York Routledge 1999 Elisabeth Arweck Anti Cult Movement FAIR Cult Information Centre CIC In Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements edited by Peter B Clarke 35 37 London and New York Routledge 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Southport Queensland 6 June 2020 Kay Dibben Senator takes aim at cult coercion The Advertiser Adelaide 5 February 2017 About Us cultconsulting org Retrieved 26 July 2022 a b Shterin Marat S Richardson James T 2000 Effects of the Western Anti Cult Movement on Development of Laws Concerning Religion in Post Communist Russia Journal of Church and State 42 2 247 271 doi 10 1093 jcs 42 2 247 ISSN 0021 969X JSTOR 23921284 Ivanenko Sergey 17 August 2009 Sergej Ivanenko O RELIGIOVEDChESKIEH ASPEKTAH IZUChENIYa ANTIKULTOVOGO DVIZhENIYa A takzhe o ego vozdejstvii na gosudarstvenno konfessionalnye otnosheniya v sovremennoj Rossii On Religional Aspects of Studying Anticultural Traffic and also about its impact on state confessional relations in modern Russia Slavic Center for Law amp Justice in Russian Retrieved 2 January 2023 Andreĭ Soldatov and I Borogan The New Nobility The Restoration of Russia s Security State and The Enduring Legacy of the KGB New York PublicAffairs 2010 65 66 Paul Marshall Lela Gilbert and Nina Shea Persecuted The Global Assault on Christians Ebook version Thomas Nelson Inc 2013 Chen Nancy N 2003 Healing Sects and Anti Cult Campaigns The China Quarterly 174 508 JSTOR 20059006 Calum Macleod City Life Beijing China bars the masses from its biggest ever anti cult exhibition The Independent London 18 July 2001 For more on use of the term evil cult see Maria Hsia Chang Falun Gong The End of Days New Haven and London Yale University Press 2004 97 100 Bryan Edelman and James T Richardson Imposed Limitations on Freedom of Religion in China and the Margin of Appreciation Doctrine A Legal Analysis of the Crackdown on the Falun Gong and Other Evil Cults Journal of Church and State 47 no 2 2005 243 267 p 243 Edelman and Richardson 251 The Ban of Falun Gong Is at People s Will www mfa gov cn Retrieved 10 July 2022 China issues anti cult law to combat Falun Gong and other movements regime deems undesirable International Law Update 5 no 12 1999 CESNUR 2001 Anti Cult 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2022 Kyodo Jiji 15 July 2022 Abe shooting suspect s mother donated 100 million to Unification Church uncle says The Japan Times Retrieved 15 July 2022 McKenna Shaun Takahara Kanako 7 December 2022 Deep Dive Episode 139 The Church the State and Kishida s headache The Japan Times retrieved 21 January 2023 David G Bromley and Phillip E Hammond eds The Future of New Religious Movements Macon GA Mercer University Press 1987 Wilson Bryan R Why The Bruderhof Is Not A Cult Scribd Retrieved 2 January 2023 Thomas Robbins Combatting Cults and Brainwashing in the United States and Western Europe A Comment on Richardson and Introvigne s Report Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 40 no 2 2001 169 176 David G Bromley ed Falling from the Faith Causes and Consequences of Religious Apostasy Sage Focus Editions London Sage Publications 1988 James R Lewis ed Scientology Oxford and New York Oxford University Press 2009 Anthony Dick 1981 The Fact Pattern behind the Deprogramming Controversy An Analysis and an Alternative N Y U Review of Law amp Social Change 9 1 73 89 Retrieved 2 January 2023 James T Richardson Conversion Careers In and Out of the New Religions Sage Contemporary Social Science Issues 1977 Reprint London and Beverley Hills CA Sage 1978 David G Bromley and J Gordon Melton eds Cults Religion and Violence Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2002 Massimo Introvigne There Is No Place for Us to Go but Up New Religious Movements and Violence Social Compass 49 no 1 2002 213 224 Paul R Powers Religion and Violence A Religious Studies Approach London and New York Routledge 2021 a b Dick Anthony and Thomas Robbins Law Social Science and the Brainwashing Exception to the First Amendment Behavioral Science and the Law 10 no 1 1992 5 29 Roy Wallis Paradoxes of Freedom and Regulation the Case of New Religious Movements in Britain and America Sociological Analysis 48 no 4 1988 355 371 Eileen Barker Religious Movements Cult and Anticult Since Jonestown Annual Review of Sociology 12 no 1 1983 329 346 Anson D Shupe and David G Bromley The New Vigilantes Deprogrammers Anti Cultists and the New Religions Sage Library of Social Research London and Beverley Hills CA Sage 1980 Anson D Shupe and Susan E Darnell Agents of Discord Deprogramming Pseudo Science and the American Anticult Movement London and New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers 2006 ISBN 0765803232 OL 22732556M Benjamin David Zablocki and Thomas Robbins eds Misunderstanding Cults Searching for Objectivity in a Controversial Field Toronto London and Buffalo NY University of Toronto Press 2001 Alberto Amitrani and Raffaella Di Marzio Mind Control in New Religious Movements and the American Psychological Association Cultic Studies Review 17 2000 101 121 a b David G Bromley and James T Richardson eds The Brainwashing Deprogramming Controversy Sociological Psychological Legal and Historical Perspectives Studies in Religion and Society Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press 1983 Eileen Barker The Making of a Moonie Choice or Brainwashing 1984 Reprint Oxford and Cambridge MA Basil Blackwell 1989 David G Bromley and Anson Shupe Anti cultism in the United States Origins Ideology and Organizational Development Social Compass 42 no 2 1995 221 236 Dick Anthony Pseudoscience and Minority Religions An Evaluation of the Brainwashing Theories of Jean Marie Abgrall Social Justice Research 12 no 4 1999 421 456 Zimbardo Philip G November 2002 Mind control psychological reality or mindless rhetoric Monitor on Psychology 33 10 5 Zimbardo Philip G May 1997 What messages are behind today s cults Monitor on Psychology Retrieved 2 January 2023 Robert Jay Lifton Destroying the World to Save It Aum Shinrikyō Apocalyptic Violence and The New Global Terrorism New York Henry Holt amp Co 1999 Margaret Thaler Singer Cults in Our Midst The Continuing Fight Against Their Hidden Menace San Francisco CA Jossey Bass 2003 James T Richardson The Active vs Passive Convert Paradigm Conflict in Conversion Recruitment Research Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 24 no 2 1985 163 179 Robinson B A 22 August 2007 About cults Allegations of brainwashing by new religious movements a k a cults Religious Tolerance Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance Archived from the original on 19 April 2012 Retrieved 29 May 2022 James T Richardson Religion and The Law In The Oxford Handbook of the Sociology of Religion edited by Peter B Clarke Oxford Handbooks Online 2009 426 Blau Eleanor 6 February 1977 A C L U AIDE WARNS ON SEIZING CULTISTS A Danger Is Seen in Actions by Parents Who Seek to Deprogram Children Held Brainwashed The New York Times Retrieved 2 January 2023 Dangerous meditation China s campaign against Falungong New York NY Human Rights Watch 2002 ISBN 156432270X LCCN 2002100348 OCLC 49045959 Staff 19 January 1994 Cult Buster Acquitted In Abduction Seattle Times Retrieved 2 January 2023 Matas David Kilgour David Bloody Harvest Revised Report into Allegations of Organ Harvesting of Falun Gong Practitioners in China organharvestinvestigation net Retrieved 10 February 2023 This incitement to hatred is most acute in China But it exists worldwide Chinese officials wherever they are posted engage in this incitement as part and parcel of their official duties In Edmonton Alberta Canada this behaviour became the subject of a police recommendation for prosecution of two Chinese consular officials in Calgary for wilful promotion of hatred against the Falun Gong Despite the police recommendation the Attorney General decided not to prosecute van Driel Barend Richardson James T 1988 Research Note Categorization of New Religious Movements in American Print Media Sociological Analysis 49 2 171 183 doi 10 2307 3711011 JSTOR 3711011 Rarely was an attempt made to define these arbitrarily applied concepts and on the occasions when this did take place anti cultist definitions were much more prevalent than social scientific insights Furthermore merely by adopting the concept cult as a descriptive category NRMs were willingly or not condemned to occupy a position in the same category of groups that includes the People s Temple the Manson Family and other marginal movements which evoke public fear and horror A great deal of effort has been expended within the social scientific tradition to unravel the complexities of marginal religious organizations Unfortunately it seems that the message is somehow totally lost to the majority of those employed by the major print media Because of the level of professionalism that characterizes the staff of the newspapers and news weeklies in our sample it can be expected that the situation is even worse among the more local and popular media as can be deduced from the findings of Bromley et al 1979 They note for instance that most anti cult oriented stories were printed in small community newspapers The failure of the print media to recognize social scientific efforts in the area of religious movement organizations as our previous research van Driel and Richardson 1985 also shows impels us to add yet another failing mark to the media report card Weiss 1985 has constructed to assess the media s reporting of the social sciences Further reading editAmitrani Alberto and Raffaella di Marzio Mind Control in New Religious Movements and the American Psychological Association Cultic Studies Journal 17 2000 101 121 Anthony Dick Pseudoscience and Minority Religions An Evaluation of the Brainwashing Theories of Jean Marie Abgrall Social Justice Research 12 no 4 1999 421 456 Arweck Elisabeth Researching New Religious Movements Responses and Redefinitions London and New York Routledge 2006 Barker Eileen The Making of a Moonie Choice or Brainwashing 1984 Reprint Oxford and Cambridge MA Basil Blackwell 1989 Barker Eileen New Religious Movements A Practical Introduction London Her Majesty s Stationery Office 1989 Beckford James A Cult Controversies The Societal Response to New Religious Movements London Tavistock 1985 ISBN 978 0422796408 Bromley David G and Anson Shupe Anti cultism in the United States Origins Ideology and Organizational Development Social Compass 42 no 2 1995 221 236 Bromley David G and Anson Shupe Public Reaction against New Religious Movements In Cults and New Religious Movements A Report of the Committee on Psychiatry and Religion of the American Psychiatric Association edited by Marc Galanter Washington DC American Psychiatric Association 1989 ISBN 0890422125 Bromley David G and Anson Shupe Strange Gods The Great American Cult Scare Boston Beacon Press 1981 Bromley David G Anson Shupe and J C Ventimiglia Atrocity Tales the Unification Church and the Social Construction of Evil Journal of Communication 29 no 3 1979 42 53 Bromley David G and James T Richardson eds The Brainwashing Deprogramming Controversy Sociological Psychological Legal and Historical Perspectives Studies in Religion and Society Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press 1983 Chryssides George D Exploring New Religions London and New York Continuum 1999 Cowan Douglas E Bearing False Witness An Introduction to the Christian Countercult London and Westport CT Praeger 2003 Cowan Douglas E Exits and Migrations Foregrounding the Christian Countercult Journal of Contemporary Religion 17 no 3 2002 339 354 Cresswell Jamie and Bryan Wilson eds New Religious Movements Changes and Responses London and New York Routledge 1999 Halperin David A ed Psychodynamic Perspectives on Religion Sect and Cult Boston Bristol and London John Wright and PSG 1983 Kaplan Jeffrey The Anti Cult Movement in America An History of Cultural Perspective Syzygy 2 no 1 1993 267 296 Kelly Aidan A ed The Evangelical Christian Anti Cult Movement Christian Counter Cult Literature Cults and New Religions Sources for Study of Nonconventional Religious Groups in Nineteenth and Twentieth Century America New York and London Garland 1990 Lalich Janja Bounded Choice True Believers and Charismatic Cults London Los Angeles and Berkeley University of California Press 2004 Lalich Janja and Karla McLaren Escaping Utopia Growing Up in a Cult Getting Out and Starting Over New York and Oxford Routledge 2018 Langone Michael Cults Psychological Manipulation and Society International Perspectives An Overview Paper presented at American Family Foundation Annual Conference at University of Minnesota 14 May 1999 Published digitally and archived on Wayback Machine retrieved 29 May 2022 Langone Michael On Dialogue Between the Two Tribes of Cultic Researchers Cultic Studies Newsletter 2 no 1 1983 11 15 Langone Michael D ed Recovery From Cults Help for Victims of Psychological and Spiritual Abuse London and New York W W Norton and American Family Foundation 1993 ISBN 0393313212 Langone Michael Secular and Religious Critiques of Cults Complementary Visions Not Irresolvable Conflicts Cultic Studies Journal 12 no 2 1995 166 186 Lifton Robert Jay Losing Reality On Cults Cultism and the Mindset of Political and Religious Zealotry London and New York The New Press 2019 Lifton Robert Jay Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism A Study of Brainwashing in China 1961 Reprint London and Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press 1989 Robbins Thomas Quo Vadis the Scientific Study of New Religious Movements Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 39 no 4 2000 515 523 Robbin Thomas and Dick Anthony Cults in the late Twentieth Century in Encyclopedia of the American Religious Experience Studies of Traditions and Movements edited by Charles H Lippy and Peter W Williams Vol 2 New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1988 ISBN 0684188619 Shupe Anson D and David G Bromley A Documentary History of the Anti Cult Movement Arlington TX Center for Social Research University of Texas 1985 Shupe Anson D and David G Bromley eds Anti Cult Movements in Cross Cultural Perspective Religious Information Systems London and New York Garland 1994 Shupe Anson D David G Bromley Donna L Oliver The Anti Cult Movement in America A Bibliography and Historical Survey Edited by J Gordon Melton Garland Reference Library of Social Science New York Garland 1984 Wilson Bryan R Apostates and New Religious Movements Oxford Oxford University Press 1994 Zablocki Benjamin David and Thomas Robbins eds Misunderstanding Cults Searching for Objectivity in A Controversial Field Toronto London and Buffalo NY University of Toronto Press 2001 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anti cult movement amp oldid 1221615222, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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