1st Edition

Routledge Handbook of International Cybersecurity

Edited By Eneken Tikk, Mika Kerttunen Copyright 2020
    422 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    416 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The Routledge Handbook of International Cybersecurity examines the development and use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) from the perspective of international peace and security.

    Acknowledging that the very notion of peace and security has become more complex, the volume seeks to determine which questions of cybersecurity are indeed of relevance for international peace and security and which, while requiring international attention, are simply issues of contemporary governance or development. The Handbook offers a variety of thematic, regional and disciplinary perspectives on the question of international cybersecurity, and the chapters contextualize cybersecurity in the broader contestation over the world order, international law, conflict, human rights, governance and development.

    The volume is split into four thematic sections:

    • Concepts and frameworks;
    • Challenges to secure and peaceful cyberspace;
    • National and regional perspectives on cybersecurity;
    • Global approaches to cybersecurity.

    This book will be of much interest to students of cybersecurity, computer science, sociology, international law, defence studies and International Relations in general.

    Chapter 30 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license at https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Handbook-of-International-Cybersecurity/Tikk-Kerttunen/p/book/9781138489011

    Foreword

    Joseph S. Nye, Jr.

    Introduction

    Eneken Tikk and Mika Kerttunen

     

    Part I: Concepts and frameworks

    1. Cybersecurity between hypersecuritization and technological routine

    Myriam Dunn-Cavelty

     

    2. Correlates of state-sponsored cyber conflict

    George E. Mitchell and Allison Pytlak

     

    3. Cybered conflict, hybrid war, informatization wars

    Chris Demchak

     

    4. The politics of stability: cement and change in cyber affairs

    Mika Kerttunen and Eneken Tikk

     

    5. In search of human rights in multilateral cybersecurity dialogues

    Allison Pytlak

     

    6. International governance of/in cyberspace

    Tang Lan (translated by Nigel Inkster)

     

    7. The becoming of cyber-military capabilities

    Mirva Salminen and Mika Kerttunen

     

    Part II: Challenges to secure and peaceful cyberspace

     

    8. Cyber vulnerability

    Brian Martin

     

    9. Ensuring the security and availability of critical infrastructure in a changing cyber-threat environment: living dangerously

     Vytautas Butrimas

     

    10. Steps to an ecology of cyberspace as a contested domain

    Martin Libicki

     

    11. Cybercrime: setting international standards

    Tatiana Tropina

     

    12. Cyberterrorism: a Schrödinger’s cat

    Mika Kerttunen

     

    13. Information operations

    Jouni Flyktman, Aki-Mauri Huhtinen and Lars Koreman

     

    14. National cyber commands

    Piret Pernik

     

    Part III: National and regional perspectives on cybersecurity

     

    15. Cyber capacity building and international security

    Souhila Amazouz

     

    16. Challenges in building regional capacities in cybersecurity: a regional organizational reflection

    Belisario Contreras and Kerry-Ann Barrett

     

    17. Singapore, ASEAN and international cybersecurity

    Benjamin Ang

     

    18. Sub-regional views on international cybersecurity: CLMV

    Lim Ratha and Sok Kunvath

     

    19. Regional cybersecurity approaches in Africa and Latin America

    Lucy Purdon and Francisco Vera

     

    20. A regional view on international cybersecurity: the scope, problem and remedies as seen in West Africa

    Folake Olagunju Oyelola

     

    21. Risk, resilience and retaliation: American perspectives on international cybersecurity

    James A. Lewis

     

    22. International information security: problems and ways of solving them

    Andrej Krutskikh & Anatoli Streltsov

     

    23. People’s Republic of China: seven cybersecurity considerations

    Zhang Li

     

    Part IV: Global approaches to cybersecurity

     

    24. Cyber Diplomacy: an Australian perspective

    Tobias Feakin and Johanna Weaver

     

    25. Confidence-building measures in cyberspace: new applications for an old concept

    Paul Meyer

     

    26. Export controls: the Wassenaar Experience and its lessons for international regulation of cyber tools

    Elaine Korzak

     

    27. Global cybersecurity and the private sector

    Anne-Marie Buzatu

     

    28. Putting the technical community back into cyber (policy)

    Pablo Hinojosa, Klée Aiken and Louise Marie Hurel

     

    29. Economic cybersecurity law: a short primer

    Kathleen Claussen

     

    30. The role of the UN Security Council in cybersecurity: international peace and security in the digital age

    Eneken Tikk and Niels Nagelhus Schia

     

    31. International law and cyber conflict

    Gary D. Brown

     

    32. Exploring the general principles of international law in cybersecurity context

    Nohyoung Park and Myung-Hyun Chung

     

    33. What do we talk about when we talk about international cybersecurity

    Eneken Tikk

     

    Index

    Biography

    Eneken Tikk is Executive Producer of the Cyber Policy Institute, Estonia, and lead of the 1nternat10nal Law project at CPI and the Erik Castrén Institute, University of Helsinki, Finland.

    Mika Kerttunen is Director of Strategy at the Cyber Policy Institute, and Senior Research Scientist at the Tallinn University of Technology, Estonia.