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.
Choucri, Nazli.
2016.
ECIR Final Report. Explorations in International Relations. :1–121.
Abstract In international relations, the traditional approaches to theory and research, practice, and policy were derived from experiences in the 19th and 20th centuries. But cyberspace, shaped by human ingenuity, is a venue for social interaction, an environment for social communication, and an enabler of new mechanisms for power and leverage. Cyberspace creates new condition — problems and opportunities — for which there are no clear precedents in human history. Already we recognize new patterns of conflict and contention, and concepts such as cyberwar, cybersecurity, and cyberattack are in circulation, buttressed by considerable evidence of cyber espionage and cybercrime.
The research problem is this: distinct features of cyberspace — such as time, scope, space, permeation, ubiquity, participation and attribution — challenge traditional modes of inquiry in international relations and limit their utility. The interdisciplinary MIT-Harvard ECIR research project explores various facets of cyber international relations, including its implications for power and politics, conflict and war.
Our primary mission and principal goal is to increase the capacity of the nation to address the policy challenges of the cyber domain. Our research is intended to influence today’s policy makers with the best thinking about issues and opportunities, and to train tomorrow’s policy makers to be effective in understanding choice and consequence in cyber matters.
Accordingly, the ECIR vision is to create an integrated knowledge domain of international relations in the cyber age, that is (a) multidisciplinary, theory-driven, technically and empirically; (b) clarifies threats and opportunities in cyberspace for national security, welfare, and influence;(c) provides analytical tools for understanding and managing transformation and change; and (d) attracts and educates generations of researchers, scholars, and analysts for international relations in the new cyber age.