Visible to the public Biblio

Filters: Author is Nazli Choucri  [Clear All Filters]
2022-03-08
Nazli Choucri, Gaurav Agarwal, Xenofon Koutsoukos.  2018.  Policy-Governed Secure Collaboration: Toward Analytics for Cybersecurity of Cyber-Physical Systems.
Mounting concerns about safety and security have resulted in an intricate ecosystem of guidelines, compliance measures, directives and policy reports for cybersecurity of all critical infrastructure. By definition, such guidelines and policies are written in linear sequential text form that makes them difficult to integrate, or to understand the policy-technology-security interactions, thus limiting their relevance for science of security. We propose to develop text-to-analytics methods and tools focusing on CPS domains such as smart grids
Nazli Choucri.  2021.  Global System for Sustainable Development (GSSD): Knowledge Meta-Networking for Decision and Strategy.
GSSD is an evolving knowledge networking system dedicated to sustainable development. Designed to help identify and extend innovative approaches toward sustainability—including enabling technologies, policies, and strategies—it tracks diverse aspects of challenges, problems, and emergent solutions to date. Specifically, it is a computer-assisted, organized system linking discrete actors with a knowledge producing capacity that is, (b) combined via common organizing principles, and (c) based on individual autonomy; such that (d) the value of networked knowledge is enhanced, and (e) the stock of knowledge is expanded further.
Nazli Choucri, Agarwal Gaurav.  2022.  CyberIR@MIT: Knowledge for Science Policy & Practice.
CyberIR@MIT is a dynamic, interactive ontology-based knowledge system focused on the evolving, diverse & complex interconnections of cyberspace & international relations.
Nazli Choucri.  2016.  Explorations in International Relations.
Explorations in Cyber International Relations (ECIR) is a collaborative research program of Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University designed to create multi-disciplinary approaches to the emergence of cyberspace in international relations. The purpose is to support policy analysis by combining leading-edge methods in computer science and technology with international law and long-range political and economic inquiry. ECIR is based in MIT Department of Political Science, with participation from Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) and Sloan School of Management. At Harvard, ECIR is based in the Kennedy School Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, with participation of Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School.
Nazli Choucri, P.S Raghavan, Dr. Sandis Šrāders, Nguyễn Anh Tuấn.  2020.  The Quad Roundtable at the Riga Conference. 2020 Riga Conference. :1–82.
Almost everyone recognizes the emergence of a new challenge in the cyber domain, namely increased threats to the security of the Internet and its various uses. Seldom does a day go by without dire reports and hair raising narratives about unauthorized intrusions, access to content, or damage to systems, or operations. And, of course, a close correlate is the loss of value. An entire industry is around threats to cyber security, prompting technological innovations and operational strategies that promise to prevent damage and destruction. This paper is a collection chapters entitled 1) "Cybersecurity – Problems, Premises, Perspectives," 2) "An Abbreviated Technical Perspective on Cybersecurity," 3) "The Conceptual Underpinning of Cyber Security Studies" 4) "Cyberspace as the Domain of Content," 5) "The Conceptual Underpinning of Cyber Security Studies," 6) "China’s Perspective on Cyber Security," 7) "Pursuing Deterrence Internationally in Cyberspace," 8) "Is Deterrence Possible in Cyber Warfare?" and 9) "A Theoretical Framework for Analyzing Interactions between Contemporary Transnational Activism and Digital Communication."
Nazli Choucri.  2021.  CyberIR@MIT: Exploration & Innovation in International Relations. Remaking the World: Toward an Age of Global Enlightenment. :27–43.
Advances in information and communication technologies – global Internet, social media, Internet of Things, and a range of related science-driven innovations and generative and emergent technologies – continue to shape a dynamic communication and information ecosystem for which there is no precedent. These advances are powerful in many ways. Foremost among these in terms of salience, ubiquity, pervasiveness, and expansion in scale and scope is the broad area of artificial intelligence. They have created a new global ecology; yet they remain opaque and must be better understood—an ecology of “knowns” that is evolving in ways that remain largely “unknown.” Especially compelling is the acceleration of Artificial Intelligence – in all its forms – with far-ranging applications shaping a new global ecosystem for which there is no precedent. This chapter presents a brief view of the most pressing challenges, articulates the logic for worldwide agreement to retain the rule of law in the international system, and presents salient features of an emergent International Accord on Artificial Intelligence. The Framework for Artificial Intelligence International Accord (AIIA) is an initial response to this critical gap in the system of international rules and regulations.
Nazli Choucri.  2012.  Cyberpolitics in International Relations.
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.