Visible to the public CyberIRWorld@MIT: Exploration & Innovation in International RelationsConflict Detection Enabled

TitleCyberIRWorld@MIT: Exploration & Innovation in International Relations
Publication TypeReport
Year of Publication2021
AuthorsChoucri, Nazli, Fairman, Lauren, Agarwal, Gaurav
Series TitleMIT Political Science Network
Pagination1-41
Date PublishedOctober 6, 2021
InstitutionMassachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Political Science Department
KeywordsConflict & War, Cyber-International Relations, Cybersecurity & Sustainability, Cyberspace & International Relations Intersections, Governance & Institutions, Knowledge management, Scientific & Technological Solutions & Strategies, System Problem, system state
AbstractThis paper presents a brief introduction to Cyber-IR@MIT—a dynamic, interactive knowledge and networking system focused on the evolving, diverse, and complex interconnections of cyberspace and international relations. The goal is to highlight key theoretical, substantive, empirical and networking issues. Cyber-IR@MIT is anchored in a multidimensional ontology. It was initially framed as an experiment during the MIT-Harvard collaboration on Explorations in Cyber International Relations (MIT, 2009-2014) to serve as a forum for quality-controlled content and materials generated throughout the research project. The vision for Cyber-IR@MIT is shaped by the research for Cyberpolitics in International Relations, a book written by Nazli Choucri and published by MIT Press in 2012. The operational approach to the knowledge system is influenced by the Global System for Sustainable Development (GSSD), developed earlier and focused on challenges of system sustainability. Cyber-IR@MIT gradually evolved into a knowledge-based system of human interactions in cyberspace and international relations, all embedded in the overarching natural system. The method consists of differentiating among the various facets of human activity in (i) cyberspace, (ii) international relations, and (iii) the intersection of the cyber and “real.” It includes problems created by humans and solution strategies, as well as enabling functions and capabilities, on the one hand, and impediments to behavior and associated barriers, on the other. See https://cyberir.mit.edu for functions. The value of this initiative lies in its conceptual foundations and method of knowledge representation – embedded in an interactive system for knowledge submission, with f search and retrieval functions.
URLhttps://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3936863
DOI10.2139/ssrn.3936863
Citation Keychoucri_fairman_agarwal_2021