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E-raamat: Cyber Security Politics: Socio-Technological Transformations and Political Fragmentation

Edited by (ETH Zurich, Switzerland), Edited by (ETH Zurich, Switzerland)
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This book examines new and challenging political aspects of cyber security and presents it as an issue defined by socio-technological uncertainty and political fragmentation.

Structured along two broad themes and providing empirical examples for how socio-technical changes and political responses interact, the first part of the book looks at the current use of cyber space in conflictual settings, while the second focuses on political responses by state and non-state actors in an environment defined by uncertainties. Within this, it highlights four key debates that encapsulate the complexities and paradoxes of cyber security politics from a Western perspective how much political influence states can achieve via cyber operations and what context factors condition the (limited) strategic utility of such operations; the role of emerging digital technologies and how the dynamics of the tech innovation process reinforce the fragmentation of the governance space; how states attempt to uphold stability in cyberspace and, more generally, in their strategic relations; and how the shared responsibility of state, economy, and society for cyber security continues to be re-negotiated in an increasingly trans-sectoral and transnational governance space.

This book will be of much interest to students of cyber security, global governance, technology studies, and international relations.

The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.
1. Introduction: Cyber security between socio-technological uncertainty
and political fragmentation Part I: Socio-technical transformations and cyber
conflict trends
2. Influence operations and other conflict trends
3. A threat
to democracies? An overview of theoretical approaches and empirical
measurements for studying the effects of disinformation
4. Cultural violence
and fragmentation on social media: Interventions and countermeasures by
humans and social bots
5. Artificial intelligence and the offencedefense
balance in cyber security
6. Quantum computing and classical politics: The
ambiguity of advantage in signals intelligence
7. Cyber space in space:
Fragmentation, vulnerability, and uncertainty Part II: Political responses in
a complex environment
8. Cyber uncertainties: Observations from
cross-national wargames
9. Uncertainty and the study of cyber deterrence: The
case of Israels limited reliance on cyber deterrence
10. Cyber securities
and cyber security politics: Understanding different logics of German cyber
security policies
11. Battling the bear: Ukraines approach to national cyber
and information security
12. Uncertainty, fragmentation, and international
obligations as shaping influences: Cyber security policy development in
Albania
13. Big techs push for norms to tackle uncertainty in cyberspace
14.
Disrupting the second oldest profession: The impact of cyber on intelligence
15. Understanding transnational cyber attribution: Moving from whodunit to
who did it
16. Conclusion: The ambiguity of cyber security politics in the
context of multidimentional uncertainty
Myriam Dunn Cavelty is deputy head of research and teaching at the Center for Security Studies (CSS), ETH Zurich, Switzerland.

Andreas Wenger is professor of international and Swiss security policy at ETH Zurich and director of the Center for Security Studies (CSS), Switzerland.