Authoritarian management of cyber-society in post-soviet states: internet penetration, policies and new protest movements
In: Studies in public policy 503
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In: Studies in public policy 503
In: The SAIS review of international affairs / the Johns Hopkins University, the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), Band 42, Heft 2, S. 63-84
ISSN: 1945-4724
In: forthcoming, Oxford Handbook of Cybersecurity, 2019.
SSRN
In: Hoover Institution Press publication no. 707
Retweets to midnight: assessing the effects of the information ecosystem on crisis decision making between nuclear weapons states -- Psychological underpinnings of post-truth in political beliefs -- The caveman and the bomb in the digital age -- Gaming communication on the global stage: social media disinformation in crisis situations -- Information operations and online activism within NATO discourse.
Reconceptualises instability in relation to cyberspaceAssesses the risks of inadvertent escalation in cyberspaceExamines the role of NATO in cyber conflictExplores the infrastructural aspects of stability and the role of resilienceCase studies include US-China relations, the 2016 Presidential Elections, IoT devices and the African Union A wide range of actors have publicly identified cyber stability as a key policy goal but the meaning of stability in the context of cyber policy remains vague and contested. Vague because most policymakers and experts do not define cyber stability when they use the concept. Contested because they propose measures that rely - often implicitly - on divergent understandings of cyber stability. This volume is a thorough investigation of instability within cyberspace and of cyberspace itself. Its purpose is to reconceptualise stability and instability for cyberspace, highlight their various dimensions and thereby identify relevant policy measures. This book critically examines both 'classic' notions associated with stability - for example, whether cyber operations can lead to unwanted escalation - as well as topics that have so far not been addressed in the existing cyber literature, such as the application of a decolonial lens to investigate Euro-American conceptualisations of stability in cyberspace