International Cyberpolitics

B. Banta
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Abstract

The earliest scholarly writing on “cyberpolitics” focused mainly on the domestic sphere, but it became clear by the mid-2000s that the Internet-generated “cyberspace” was also having massive effects on the broader dynamics and patterns of international politics. A great deal of the early research on this phenomenon focused on the way cyberspace might empower nonstate actors of all varieties. In many respects that has been the case, but states have increasingly asserted their “cyberpower” in a variety of ways. Some scholars even predict a coming territorialization of what was initially viewed as a technology that fundamentally resisted the dictates of sovereign borders. Such disparate possibilities speak to the ambiguity surrounding the intersection of the international system and the political affordances generated by the Internet and related technologies. Does cyberpolitics challenge the international system as we know it—perhaps altering the very nature of war, sovereignty, and the state itself—or will it merely be subsumed within some structurally mandated logic of state-centric self-help? As might be expected, research that speaks to such foundational questions is quite sprawling. It is also still somewhat inchoate because the object of study is complex and highly malleable. The cyber-“domain” involves a physical substrate ostensibly subject to a territorially demarcated international system, but Internet-enabled activities have expanded rapidly and unpredictably over the past few decades because it also involves a virtual superstructure designed to be a network of networks, and so fundamentally at odds with centralized control. As such, some argue that because cyberspace has so enmeshed itself into all aspects of society, international politics and cyberspace should be seen as coevolving systems, and concomitantly that fields such as International Relations (IR) must update their theoretical and methodological tools. Such contentions indicate that an understanding of extra-domestic cyberpolitics has not so much involved progressively developing insights as differing perspectives compete to explain reality, but rather the growing recognition that we are only now catching up to a rapidly changing reality. As part of that recognition, much of the cutting-edge International Studies (IS) work on cyberpolitics is aimed at researching how the central actor in global politics, the state, is increasingly a cyberpolitical actor. This has meant the abandonment of strong assertions about the way cyberspace would exist separate from the “real world” of state interaction, or that it would force the alteration of especially hierarchical forms of state power. Instead, burgeoning literatures examine the myriad ways states seek to resist and control cyberpolitical activity by others, deploy their own cyberpolitical power, and even shape the very cyberspace in which all of this can occur. This focus on “international cyberpolitics” thus involves tracking a complex and growing milieu of practices, all while reflecting on the possibly fundamental changes being forced upon the international system. All of this points to the likelihood that the study of international politics will increasingly also be the study of international cyberpolitics.
国际Cyberpolitics
最早关于“网络政治”的学术著作主要集中在国内领域,但到2000年代中期,互联网产生的“网络空间”也对更广泛的国际政治动态和模式产生了巨大影响。关于这一现象的大量早期研究集中在网络空间可能赋予各种非国家行为者权力的方式上。在许多方面,情况确实如此,但各国越来越多地以各种方式宣称自己的“网络力量”。一些学者甚至预测,一项最初被视为从根本上抵制主权边界支配的技术,将会出现领土化。这种截然不同的可能性说明了围绕国际体系和互联网及相关技术所产生的政治支持的交叉点的模糊性。网络政治是否会挑战我们所知的国际体系——也许会改变战争、主权和国家本身的本质——或者它仅仅会被纳入某种以国家为中心的自助的结构性强制逻辑之中?正如人们所预料的那样,针对这些基础问题的研究相当庞大。它还有些不成熟,因为研究对象是复杂的和高度可塑的。网络“领域”涉及一个表面上受领土划分的国际体系约束的物理基础,但在过去几十年里,互联网活动迅速而不可预测地扩张,因为它还涉及一个被设计为网络的网络的虚拟上层建筑,因此从根本上与集中控制不一致。因此,一些人认为,由于网络空间已经融入社会的各个方面,国际政治和网络空间应该被视为共同进化的系统,同时,国际关系(IR)等领域必须更新他们的理论和方法工具。这些争论表明,对国外网络政治的理解,与其说是涉及到逐渐形成的见解,不如说是涉及到不同观点竞相解释现实,而是越来越多地认识到,我们只是现在才赶上快速变化的现实。作为这种认识的一部分,许多关于网络政治的前沿国际研究(IS)工作旨在研究全球政治的核心行动者,即国家,如何日益成为网络政治行动者。这意味着要放弃一些强有力的主张,即网络空间将与国家互动的“现实世界”分开存在,或者它将迫使国家权力的等级形式发生改变。相反,新兴的文献研究了国家寻求抵制和控制他人网络政治活动的无数方式,部署自己的网络政治力量,甚至塑造了所有这些都可能发生的网络空间。因此,对“国际网络政治”的关注涉及跟踪一个复杂和不断增长的实践环境,同时反思国际体系可能发生的根本变化。所有这些都表明,对国际政治的研究将越来越多地成为对国际网络政治的研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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