ABSTRACT

This book offers a multidisciplinary analysis of emerging technologies and their impact on the new international security environment across three levels of analysis.

While recent technological developments, such as Artificial Intelligence (AI), robotics and automation, have the potential to transform international relations in positive ways, they also pose challenges to peace and security and raise new ethical, legal and political questions about the use of power and the role of humans in war and conflict. This book makes a contribution to these debates by considering emerging technologies across three levels of analysis: (1) the international system (systemic level) including the balance of power; (2) the state and its role in international affairs and how these technologies are redefining and challenging the state’s traditional roles; and (3) the relationship between the state and society, including how these technologies affect individuals and non-state actors. This provides specific insights at each of these levels and generates a better understanding of the connections between the international and the local when it comes to technological advance across time and space

The chapters examine the implications of these technologies for the balance of power, examining the strategies of the US, Russia, and China to harness AI, robotics and automation (and how their militaries and private corporations are responding); how smaller and less powerful states and non-state actors are adjusting; the political, ethical and legal implications of AI and automation; what these technologies mean for how war and power is understood and utilized in the 21st century; and how these technologies diffuse power away from the state to society, individuals and non-state actors.

This volume will be of much interest to students of international security, science and technology studies, law, philosophy, and international relations.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Machines, the state, and war

chapter 1|15 pages

Histories of technologies

Society, the state, and the emergence of postmodern warfare

part I|74 pages

The machine and the international system

chapter 3|16 pages

Artificial intelligence

Implications for small states

chapter 4|18 pages

Artificial intelligence and the military balance of power

Interrogating the US–China confrontation

chapter 5|18 pages

Mitigating accidental war

Risk-based strategies for governing lethal autonomous weapons systems

part II|70 pages

Emerging technologies, the state, and the changing character of conflict

chapter 6|20 pages

Politics in the machine

The political context of emerging technologies, national security, and great power competition

chapter 7|14 pages

Inequitable Internet

Reclaiming digital sovereignty through the blockchain

part III|112 pages

The state, society, and non-state actors

chapter 10|19 pages

Cyber autonomy

Automating the hacker – self-healing, self-adaptive, automatic cyber defense systems and their impact on industry, society, and national security

chapter 14|14 pages

Disrupting paradigms through new technologies

Assessing the potential of smart water points to improve water security for marginalized communities

chapter 15|19 pages

“Just wrong”, “disgusting”, “grotesque”

How to deal with public rejection of new potentially life-saving technologies

chapter |10 pages

Conclusion

Society, security, and technology: Mapping a fluid relationship