TY - BOOK AU - Choucri,Nazli TI - Cyberpolitics in international relations SN - 0262305178 AV - JZ1254 .C47 2012 U1 - 327.10285/4678 23 PY - 2012/// CY - Cambridge, Mass. PB - MIT Press KW - Internet and international relations KW - Technology and international relations KW - Internet KW - Political aspects KW - Information technology KW - Internet et relations internationales KW - Technologie et relations internationales KW - Aspect politique KW - Technologie de l'information KW - POLITICAL SCIENCE KW - Globalization KW - bisacsh KW - COMPUTERS KW - Information Theory KW - fast KW - Internationale Politik KW - gnd KW - Cyberspace KW - Informationstechnik KW - SOCIAL SCIENCES/Political Science/General KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Acknowledgments -- I. New Challenges to International Relations : Theory and Policy -- Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. Theory matters in international relations -- Chapter 3. Cyberspace : New domain of international relations -- Chapter 4. Cyber content : Leveraging knowledge and networking -- II. Cyber Venues and Levels of Analysis -- Chapter 5. The state system : National profiles and cyber propensities -- Chapter 6. The international system : Cyber conflicts and threats to security -- Chapter 7. The international system : Cyberpolitics of cooperation and collaboration -- Chapter 8. The global system : Pressures of growth and expansion -- Chapter 9. Cyberspace and sustainability : Convergence on the global agenda -- Chapter 10. Conclusion : Lateral re-alignment and the future of cyberpolitics -- Notes -- References -- Index N2 - An examination of the ways cyberspace is changing both the theory and the practice of international relations. Cyberspace is widely acknowledged as a fundamental fact of daily life in today's world. Until recently, its political impact was thought to be a matter of low politics - background conditions and routine processes and decisions. Now, however, experts have begun to recognize its effect on high politics - national security, core institutions, and critical decision processes. In this book, Nazli Choucri investigates the implications of this new cyberpolitical reality for international relations theory, policy, and practice. The ubiquity, fluidity, and anonymity of cyberspace have already challenged such concepts as leverage and influence, national security and diplomacy, and borders and boundaries in the traditionally state-centric arena of international relations. Choucri grapples with fundamental questions of how we can take explicit account of cyberspace in the analysis of world politics and how we can integrate the traditional international system with its cyber venues. After establishing the theoretical and empirical terrain, Choucri examines modes of cyber conflict and cyber cooperation in international relations ; the potential for the gradual convergence of cyberspace and sustainability, in both substantive and policy terms ; and the emergent synergy of cyberspace and international efforts toward sustainable development. Choucri's discussion is theoretically driven and empirically grounded, drawing on recent data and analyzing the dynamics of cyberpolitics at individual, state, international, and global levels UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=512643 ER -