Technology and International Relations
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies
"Technology and International Relations" published on by Oxford University Press.
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In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies
"Technology and International Relations" published on by Oxford University Press.
Exploring how changes in advanced technology deeply affect international politics, this book theoretically engages with the overriding relevance of investments in technological research, and the ways in which they directly foster a country's economic and military standing. Scholars and practitioners present important insights on the technical and social issues at the core of technology competition. Technology and International Relations emphasizes the importance of leadership styles, domestic political agendas and the relative weight of technologically driven countries in global affairs. It highlights the now widely shared belief among both developed and developing countries that technology will be the defining factor in international politics. The book also unpacks the complexity of real-life cases of key technological advances, including artificial intelligence, UAVs, satellites and the responses of governments and the private sector to rising technological challenges.
World Affairs Online
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies
"Twenty-First Century Developments in the Field of Science, Technology, and International Relations" published on by Oxford University Press.
In: Georgetown journal of international affairs: GJIA, Band 24, Heft 2, S. 135-135
ISSN: 2471-8831
In: Palgrave studies in international relations
American policy towards the internet has been the subject of popular debate, from the Iranian Green Revolution to Edward Snowden's revelations about Internet surveillance. This book examines the internet as a form of power in global politics, taking into account the significance of global material culture upon theories of international relations to reconsider how technology is understood as a form of social power. Examining American Internet policy as the product of the Open Door tradition in US foreign relations, McCarthy suggests that American policy officials actively promote the construction and maintenance of a network that maintains a 'free flow of information' in order to spread liberal democratic capitalism internationally. The book argues that technology is a form of institutional power that reflects the cultural values of its creators in the case of the Internet, it reflects the cultural values of American liberal capitalism. Considered in this way, our theoretical conceptualization of technology and power is altered, pushing our analyses to consider the sociotechnical production of global order as the product of an uneven and combined global political economy. A unique and topical contribution to internet governance studies, this book will be a valuable resource to scholars of International Relations Theory, Global Politics and Technology Studies.
In: Palgrave studies in international relations
In: International affairs, Band 91, Heft 3, S. 626-627
ISSN: 1468-2346
In: Routledge studies in conflict, security and technology
"This book analyses how digital transformation disrupts established patterns of world politics, moving International Relations (IR) increasingly towards Digital International Relations. This volume examines technological, agential and ordering processes that explain this fundamental change. The contributors trace how digital disruption changes the international world we live in, ranging from security to economics, from human rights advocacy to deep fakes, and from diplomacy to international law. The book makes two sets of contributions. First, it shows that the ongoing digital revolution profoundly changes every major dimension of international politics. Second, focusing on the interplay of technology, agency and order, it provides a framework for explaining these changes. The book also provides a map for adjusting the study of international politics to studying International Relations, making a case for upgrading, augmenting and rewiring the discipline. Theory follows practice in International Relations, but if the discipline wants to be able to meaningfully analyse the present and come up with plausible scenarios for the future, it must not lag too far behind major transformations of the world that it studies. This book facilitates that theoretical journey. This book will be of much interest to students of cyber-politics, politics and technology, and International Relations"--
In: Emerging technologies, ethics and international affairs
How (not) to talk about technology : international relations and the question of agency / Matthias Leese & Marijin Hoijtink -- Co-production : the study of productive processes at the level of materiality and discourse / Katja Lindskov Jacobsen & Linda Monsees -- Configuring warfare : automation, control, agency / Matthias Leese -- Security and technology : unraveling the politics in satellite imagery of North Korea / Philipp Olbrich -- Vision, visuality and agency in the US drone program / Alex Edney-Browne -- What does technology do? : Blockchains, co-production, and extensions of liberal market governance in Anglo-American finance / Malcolm Campbell-Verduyn -- Who connects the dots? Agents and agency in predictive policing / Mareile Kaufman -- Designing digital borders : the Visa Information System (VIS) / Georgios Glouftsios -- Technology, agency, critique : an interview with Claudia Aradau / Claudia Aradau, Marijin Hoijtink, & Matthias Leese.
Science, technology, and art in international relations : origins and prospects / J.P. Singh -- A role for phenomenology in ir scholarship / Alena Drieschova -- How to discomfort a worldview? : social sciences, surveillance technologies, and defamiliarization / Rocco Bellanova and Ann Rudinow Saetnan -- World-viewing as world-making : feminist technoscience, international relations, and the aesthetics of the anthropocene / Cara Daggett -- Emerging science and technologies : diplomacy, security, and governance / Margaret E. Kosal -- Constructed "cyber" realities & international relations theory / Ben Wagner -- Constructing an inventive order of rights : the geopolitics of island-building in transnational waters / Venilla Rajaguru -- IR's constitutive absence and the promise of STAIR / Maximilian Mayer -- "The heart is a pump. Or is it?" : the politics of biomedicine, the objectivity of science, and the way we know the world / Christina Hellmich -- Thinking through the science, technology, and art of medicine : an agenda for international relations / Alison Howell -- Oceanic artscapes and international relations / Camellia Webb-Gannon -- From the globe to the germ, and back / Michele Acuto -- Science in the international political economy / David J Hornsby -- Creativity as a worldview : power in collaborative practices / Willow Williamson -- Reflexivity and political analysis : if everything is socially constructed, how can we construct theories? / Peter M. Haas -- Art and agency : alternative spaces for subaltern voices / Mónica Trujillo-López -- Cookbooks, politics, and culture / Ilan Zvi Baron -- Human/nonhuman assemblages in STAIR : understanding distributed agency in international relations / Kathleen P. J. Brennan -- Resistance to a worldview / Ritu Mathur.
In: International affairs, Band 91, Heft 3, S. 626-627
ISSN: 0020-5850
In: Cambridge review of international affairs, Band 22, Heft 4, S. 559-561
ISSN: 1474-449X
In: Cambridge review of international affairs, Band 22, Heft 4, S. 559-562
ISSN: 0955-7571
In: Politique étrangère: revue trimestrielle publiée par l'Institut Français des Relations Internationales, Band Automne, Heft 3, S. XIX-XIX
ISSN: 1958-8992