0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R500 - R1,000 (1)
  • R1,000 - R2,500 (2)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 3 of 3 matches in All Departments

Deter, Disrupt, or Deceive - Assessing Cyber Conflict as an Intelligence Contest (Paperback): Robert Chesney, Max Smeets Deter, Disrupt, or Deceive - Assessing Cyber Conflict as an Intelligence Contest (Paperback)
Robert Chesney, Max Smeets; Foreword by Amy Zegart; Contributions by Robert Chesney, Max Smeets, …
R875 Discovery Miles 8 750 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

A fresh perspective on statecraft in the cyber domain The idea of “cyber war” has played a dominant role in both academic and popular discourse concerning the nature of statecraft in the cyber domain. However, this lens of war and its expectations for death and destruction may distort rather than help clarify the nature of cyber competition and conflict. Are cyber activities actually more like an intelligence contest, where both states and nonstate actors grapple for information advantage below the threshold of war? In Deter, Disrupt, or Deceive, Robert Chesney and Max Smeets argue that reframing cyber competition as an intelligence contest will improve our ability to analyze and strategize about cyber events and policy. The contributors to this volume debate the logics and implications of this reframing. They examine this intelligence concept across several areas of cyber security policy and in different national contexts. Taken as a whole, the chapters give rise to a unique dialogue, illustrating areas of agreement and disagreement among leading experts and placing all of it in conversation with the larger fields of international relations and intelligence studies. Deter, Disrupt, or Deceive is a must read because it offers a new way for scholars, practitioners, and students to understand statecraft in the cyber domain.

Cyberspace and Instability (Hardcover): Robert Chesney, James Shires, Max Smeets Cyberspace and Instability (Hardcover)
Robert Chesney, James Shires, Max Smeets
R2,934 R2,531 Discovery Miles 25 310 Save R403 (14%) Ships in 9 - 17 working days

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 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. It 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.

Deter, Disrupt, or Deceive - Assessing Cyber Conflict as an Intelligence Contest (Hardcover): Robert Chesney, Max Smeets Deter, Disrupt, or Deceive - Assessing Cyber Conflict as an Intelligence Contest (Hardcover)
Robert Chesney, Max Smeets; Foreword by Amy Zegart; Contributions by Robert Chesney, Max Smeets, …
R2,408 Discovery Miles 24 080 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

A fresh perspective on statecraft in the cyber domain The idea of “cyber war” has played a dominant role in both academic and popular discourse concerning the nature of statecraft in the cyber domain. However, this lens of war and its expectations for death and destruction may distort rather than help clarify the nature of cyber competition and conflict. Are cyber activities actually more like an intelligence contest, where both states and nonstate actors grapple for information advantage below the threshold of war? In Deter, Disrupt, or Deceive, Robert Chesney and Max Smeets argue that reframing cyber competition as an intelligence contest will improve our ability to analyze and strategize about cyber events and policy. The contributors to this volume debate the logics and implications of this reframing. They examine this intelligence concept across several areas of cyber security policy and in different national contexts. Taken as a whole, the chapters give rise to a unique dialogue, illustrating areas of agreement and disagreement among leading experts and placing all of it in conversation with the larger fields of international relations and intelligence studies. Deter, Disrupt, or Deceive is a must read because it offers a new way for scholars, practitioners, and students to understand statecraft in the cyber domain.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Fully Human - A New Way Of Using Your…
Steve Biddulph Paperback  (1)
R467 R427 Discovery Miles 4 270
Migration and Society in Britain…
Ian Whyte Hardcover R3,197 Discovery Miles 31 970
Theranostics and Precision Medicine for…
Ganji Purnachandra Nagaraju, Ramakrishna Vadde Hardcover R5,060 R3,481 Discovery Miles 34 810
Karl Barth - Against Hegemony
Timothy J. Gorringe Hardcover R1,662 Discovery Miles 16 620
Handbook of Basic and Clinical Ocular…
Sunny E. Ohia, Naj Sharif Paperback R4,223 Discovery Miles 42 230
Rise and Shine American Level 6…
Anna Osborn Digital product license key R1,097 Discovery Miles 10 970
Small Mercies
Dennis Lehane Paperback R422 Discovery Miles 4 220
Wider World 2 Teacher's Book with…
Rod Fricker Spiral bound R2,380 Discovery Miles 23 800
Sleeper
Mike Nicol Paperback R300 R277 Discovery Miles 2 770
An African History Of Africa - From The…
Zeinab Badawi Paperback R430 R397 Discovery Miles 3 970

 

Partners