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Cyberspace has become the ultimate frontier and central issue of
international conflict, geopolitical competition, and security.
Emerging threats and technologies continuously challenge the
prospect of an open, secure, and free cyberspace. Additionally, the
rising influence of technology on society and culture increasingly
pushes international diplomacy to establish responsible state
behavior in cyberspace and internet governance toward fragmentation
and polarization. In this context, novel normative practices and
actors are emerging both inside and outside the conventional sites
of international diplomacy and global governance. In Hybridity,
Conflict, and the Global Politics of Cybersecurity, Fabio Cristiano
and Bibi van den Berg explore the hybridity and conflict inherent
to these recent processes of remodulation of the global politics of
cybersecurity by analyzing emerging normative practices, threats
and technologies, and actors. Through this comprehensive analysis,
this edited volume ultimately sheds light on the problematic logic
of emergence that informs the global politics of cybersecurity and
delineates novel normative paths for cyberspace moving forward.
This edited volume explores how artificial intelligence (AI) is
transforming international conflict in cyberspace. Over the past
three decades, cyberspace developed into a crucial frontier and
issue of international conflict. However, scholarly work on the
relationship between AI and conflict in cyberspace has been
produced along somewhat rigid disciplinary boundaries and an even
more rigid sociotechnical divide – wherein technical and social
scholarship are seldomly brought into a conversation. This is the
first volume to address these themes through a comprehensive and
cross-disciplinary approach. With the intent of exploring the
question ‘what is at stake with the use of automation in
international conflict in cyberspace through AI?’, the chapters
in the volume focus on three broad themes, namely: (1) technical
and operational, (2) strategic and geopolitical, and (3) normative
and legal. These also constitute the three parts in which the
chapters of this volume are organised, although these thematic
sections should not be considered as an analytical or a
disciplinary demarcation. This book will be of much interest to
students of cyber-conflict, artificial intelligence, security
studies and International Relations.
This international, edited collection brings together personal
accounts from researchers working in and on conflict and explores
the roles of emotion, violence, uncertainty, identity and
positionality within the process of doing research, as well as the
complexity of methodological choices. It highlights the
researchers' own subjectivity and presents a nuanced view of
conflict research that goes beyond the 'messiness' inherent in the
process of research in and on violence. It addresses the
uncomfortable spaces of conflict research, the potential for
violence of research itself and the need for deeper reflection on
these issues. This powerful book opens up spaces for new
conversations about the realities of conflict research. These
critical self-reflections and honest accounts provide important
insights for any scholar or practitioner working in similar
environments.
This international, edited collection brings together personal
accounts from researchers working in and on conflict and explores
the roles of emotion, violence, uncertainty, identity and
positionality within the process of doing research, as well as the
complexity of methodological choices. It highlights the
researchers' own subjectivity and presents a nuanced view of
conflict research that goes beyond the 'messiness' inherent in the
process of research in and on violence. It addresses the
uncomfortable spaces of conflict research, the potential for
violence of research itself and the need for deeper reflection on
these issues. This powerful book opens up spaces for new
conversations about the realities of conflict research. These
critical self-reflections and honest accounts provide important
insights for any scholar or practitioner working in similar
environments.
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