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This Era of Black Activism
Mary Marcel, Edith Joachimpillai; Contributions by Mary Marcel, Edith Joachimpillai, Greg Austin, …
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R2,517
Discovery Miles 25 170
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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While much focus has been placed on Black Lives Matter activism in
response to police and civilian murders of Black men and women, the
contributors argue that Black activism in this era has addressed a
broader range of issues in a wide array of settings, both on the
street and inside institutions and communities. This Era of Black
Activism includes chapters on this era of Black activism from
2000-2022. It describes how previous activism has influenced this
generation, while showing innovations in political approaches,
leadership and organizational formations, and the use of social and
other media for movement purposes. Topics include the innovations
of #BlackLives Matter as a movement; the Florida activist group
Dream Defenders; policing and discrepancies in reporting on
Ferguson; the role of citizen cameras in Black activism; social
media for Black community coping and well-being; BIPOC Gay Power
activism vs. Gay Pride; academic activism by Black and White
professors; corporate responses to #BLM; #MeToo and healing within
the Black community; Black health activism and the Covid pandemic;
and bridging activism and policy for a new social contract. It also
offers an additional bibliography on Black activism for
environmental justice, athlete anti-racist activism, and the role
of the Black Church in this era.
This book documents and explains civil defence preparations for
national cyber emergencies in conditions of both peace and war. The
volume analyses the escalating sense of crisis around
state-sponsored cyber attacks that has emerged since 2015, when the
United States first declared a national emergency in cyberspace. It
documents a shift in thinking in the USA, from cooperative
resilience-oriented approaches at national level to more highly
regulated, state-led civil defence initiatives. Although the
American response has been mirrored in other countries, the shift
is far from universal. Civil defence strategies have come into play
but the global experience of that has not been consistent or even
that successful. Containing contributions from well-placed scholars
and practitioners, this volume reviews a selection of national
experiences (from the USA, Australia, India, China, Estonia, and
Finland) and a number of key thematic issues (information weapons,
alliance coordination, and attack simulations). These demonstrate a
disconnect between the deepening sense of vulnerability and the
availability of viable solutions at the national level. Awareness
of this gap may ultimately lead to more internationally oriented
cooperation, but the trend for now appears to be more conflictual
and rooted in a growing sense of insecurity. This book will be of
much interest to students of cyber security, homeland security,
disaster management, and international relations, as well as
practitioners and policy-makers.
This book investigates the goals and policy aspects of cyber
security education in the light of escalating technical, social and
geopolitical challenges. The past ten years have seen a tectonic
shift in the significance of cyber security education. Once the
preserve of small groups of dedicated educators and industry
professionals, the subject is now on the frontlines of geopolitical
confrontation and business strategy. Global shortages of talent
have created pressures on corporate and national policy for
workforce development. Cyber Security Education offers an updated
approach to the subject as we enter the next decade of
technological disruption and political threats. The contributors
include scholars and education practitioners from leading research
and education centres in Europe, North America and Australia. This
book provides essential reference points for education policy on
the new social terrain of security in cyberspace and aims to
reposition global debates on what education for security in
cyberspace can and should mean. This book will be of interest to
students of cyber security, cyber education, international security
and public policy generally, as well as practitioners and
policy-makers.
This book investigates the goals and policy aspects of cyber
security education in the light of escalating technical, social and
geopolitical challenges. The past ten years have seen a tectonic
shift in the significance of cyber security education. Once the
preserve of small groups of dedicated educators and industry
professionals, the subject is now on the frontlines of geopolitical
confrontation and business strategy. Global shortages of talent
have created pressures on corporate and national policy for
workforce development. Cyber Security Education offers an updated
approach to the subject as we enter the next decade of
technological disruption and political threats. The contributors
include scholars and education practitioners from leading research
and education centres in Europe, North America and Australia. This
book provides essential reference points for education policy on
the new social terrain of security in cyberspace and aims to
reposition global debates on what education for security in
cyberspace can and should mean. This book will be of interest to
students of cyber security, cyber education, international security
and public policy generally, as well as practitioners and
policy-makers.
This book documents and explains civil defence preparations for
national cyber emergencies in conditions of both peace and war. The
volume analyses the escalating sense of crisis around
state-sponsored cyber attacks that has emerged since 2015, when the
United States first declared a national emergency in cyberspace. It
documents a shift in thinking in the USA, from cooperative
resilience-oriented approaches at national level to more highly
regulated, state-led civil defence initiatives. Although the
American response has been mirrored in other countries, the shift
is far from universal. Civil defence strategies have come into play
but the global experience of that has not been consistent or even
that successful. Containing contributions from well-placed scholars
and practitioners, this volume reviews a selection of national
experiences (from the USA, Australia, India, China, Estonia, and
Finland) and a number of key thematic issues (information weapons,
alliance coordination, and attack simulations). These demonstrate a
disconnect between the deepening sense of vulnerability and the
availability of viable solutions at the national level. Awareness
of this gap may ultimately lead to more internationally oriented
cooperation, but the trend for now appears to be more conflictual
and rooted in a growing sense of insecurity. This book will be of
much interest to students of cyber security, homeland security,
disaster management, and international relations, as well as
practitioners and policy-makers.
There is a widening range of organizations that are being called
upon to do conflict prevention. These actors range from the
corporate sector and NGOs to regional and multilateral economic and
political organizations, with diverse mandates, leadership,
funding, and operational activities. Conflict Prevention from
Rhetoric to Reality, Volume 2: Opportunities and Innovations offers
a critical evaluation of existing and emerging approaches to
applied conflict prevention. An international team of practitioners
and researchers with rich theoretical and field experience examine
the analytical requirements to understand the causes of conflict
and link these causes to a range of response options by a variety
of relevant actors. They also discuss the newest frontiers of
conflict prevention, including the threat of terrorism and the role
of the private sector. While development practitioners, the
corporate sector, foreign policy makers, and NGOs are coming to
conflict prevention from different directions, they nevertheless
reflect common objectives, and need to be able to speak each
other's language. The volume highlights innovative approaches to
allow individuals within these organizations to understand how they
can best use the array of political, economic, social and
developmental instruments available to them to be better analysts
and to provide for more effective responses.
This book offers the first benchmarking study of China's response
to the problems of security in cyber space. There are several
useful descriptive books on cyber security policy in China
published between 2010 and 2016. As a result, we know quite well
the system for managing cyber security in China, and the history of
policy responses. What we don't know so well, and where this book
is useful, is how capable China has become in this domain relative
to the rest of the world. This book is a health check, a report
card, on China's cyber security system in the face of escalating
threats from criminal gangs and hostile states. The book also
offers an assessment of the effectiveness of China's efforts. It
lays out the major gaps and shortcomings in China's cyber security
policy. It is the first book to base itself around an assessment of
China's cyber industrial complex, concluding that China does not
yet have one. As Xi Jinping said in July 2016, the country's core
technologies are dominated by foreigners.
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