Security and the Internet: Barbarians at the gate
Reference:
Cornish, P., 2001. Security and the Internet: Barbarians at the gate. The World Today, 57 (2).
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Official URL:
http://www.chathamhouse.org/publications/twt/archive/view/164609
Abstract
Over the last decade, the study of security has been affected by two revolutions: the ending of the Cold War in Europe; and the growth of the internet. The first removed the adversarial rationale which had underpinned defence and security thinking and practice since 1945. The physical manifestations of the Cold War - massive military research and development projects, conscript armies, vast surface and submarine fleets - all became obsolete in an instant. Defence would now be but one item in a new agenda which would include human, environmental and economic security. Defence institutions and the defence mind-set have been shaped by this political revolution, but have so far not been overwhelmed by it. The internet revolution, however, represents an altogether greater, more fundamental challenge; this, at least, is the claim of the revolutionaries.
Details
| Item Type | Articles |
| Creators | Cornish, P. |
| Departments | Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences > Politics Languages and International Studies |
| Refereed | No |
| Status | Published |
| ID Code | 26252 |
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