Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Cyber security between socio-technological uncertainty and political fragmentation
Myriam Dunn Cavelty and Andreas Wenger
Part I: Socio-technical transformations and cyber conflict trends
2. Influence operations and other conflict trends
Marie Baezner and Sean Cordey
3. A threat to democracies? An overview of theoretical approaches and empirical measurements for studying the effects of disinformation
Wolf J. Schünemann
4. Cultural violence and fragmentation on social media: Interventions and countermeasures by humans and social bots
Jasmin Haunschild, Marc-André Kaufhold and Christian Reuter
5. Artificial intelligence and the offence–defense balance in cyber security
Matteo E. Bonfanti
6. Quantum computing and classical politics: The ambiguity of advantage in signals intelligence
Jon R. Lindsay
7. Cyberspace in space: Fragmentation, vulnerability, and uncertainty
Johan Eriksson and Giampiero Giacomello
Part II: Political responses in a complex environment
8. Cyber uncertainties: Observations from cross-national war games
Miguel Alberto Gomez and Christopher Whyte
9. Uncertainty and the study of cyber deterrence: The case of Israel’s limited reliance on cyber deterrence
Amir Lupovici
10. Cyber securities and cyber security politics: Understanding different logics of German cyber security policies
Stefan Steiger
11. Battling the bear: Ukraine’s approach to national cyber and information security
Aaron Brantly
12. Uncertainty, fragmentation, and international obligations as shaping influences: Cyber security policy development in Albania
Islam Jusufi
13. Big tech’s push for norms to tackle uncertainty in cyberspace
Jacqueline Eggenschwiler
14. Disrupting the second oldest profession: The impact of cyber on intelligence
Danny Steed
15. Understanding transnational cyber attribution: Moving from ‘whodunit’ to who did it
Brenden Kuerbis, Farzaneh Badiei, Karl Grindal and Milton Mueller
16. Conclusion: The ambiguity of cyber security politics in the context of multidimentional uncertainty
Andreas Wenger and Myriam Dunn Cavelty