ABSTRACT

From the "Facebook" revolutions in the Arab world to the use of social networking in the aftermath of disasters in Japan and Haiti, to the spread of mobile telephony throughout the developing world: all of these developments are part of how information and communication technologies are altering global affairs. With the rise of the social web and applications like Facebook, YouTube and Twitter, scholars and practitioners of international affairs are adapting to this new information space across a wide scale of issue areas. In conflict resolution, dialogues and communication are taking the form of open social networks, while in the legal realm, where cyberspace is largely lawless space, states are stepping up policing efforts to combat online criminality and hackers are finding new ways around increasingly sophisticated censorship. Militaries are moving to deeply incorporate information technologies into their doctrines, and protesters are developing innovative uses of technology to keep one step ahead of the authorities. The essays and topical cases in this book explore such issues as networks and networked thinking, information ownership, censorship, neutrality, cyberwars, humanitarian needs, terrorism, privacy and rebellion, giving a comprehensive overview of the core issues in the field, complemented by real world examples.

part I|102 pages

Part I

chapter 1|20 pages

Cyberwar

A Real and Growing Threat

chapter 2|28 pages

From an Analog Past to a Digital Future

Information and Communication Technology in Conflict Management

chapter 3|24 pages

Marching Across the Cyber Frontier

Explaining the Global Diffusion of Network-centric Warfare

chapter 4|8 pages

Viewpoint

Cyberterrorism: Cyber “Pearl Harbor” is Imminent

chapter 5|10 pages

Viewpoint

Protecting Google. Is an Attack Against Google, an Attack Against the U.S.?

chapter 6|10 pages

Viewpoint

Invisible Threats

part II|133 pages

Part II

chapter 7|14 pages

Web 2.0 and Public Diplomacy

chapter 8|26 pages

Call for Power?

Mobile Phones as Facilitators of Political Activism

chapter 9|10 pages

ICT Infrastructure in Two Asian Giants

A Comparative Analysis of China and India 1

chapter 11|16 pages

The Political History of the Internet

A Theoretical Approach to the Implications for U.S. Power

chapter 15|10 pages

Viewpoint

Combating Censorship Should be a Foreign Policy Goal

chapter 16|4 pages

Viewpoint

An Alternative Perspective on Cyber Anarchy for Policy-makers

part III|131 pages

Part III

chapter 17|10 pages

Digital Divide

The Reality of Information Haves and Have-nots

chapter 20|10 pages

Knowledge Ecologies in International Affairs

A New Paradigm for Dialog and Collaboration

chapter 21|16 pages

Environmental Politics

How Information and Communication Technology have Changed the Debate

chapter 22|10 pages

Viewpoint

Privacy—There is Not Enough and it is Shrinking Fast

chapter 23|10 pages

Viewpoint

Information Overload: Real and Growing by the Minute

chapter 24|6 pages

Viewpoint

PageRank and Perceptions of Quality

chapter 25|16 pages

Viewpoint

Citizen Change: How Technology and New Media have Turned us all into Digital Freedom Fighters

chapter 26|14 pages

Viewpoint

Old and New Media: Picket Fences Until the End

chapter 27|4 pages

Postscript