The Oxford Handbook of Cyber Security

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AGGIUNGI AL CARRELLO
NOTE EDITORE
Cyber security is concerned with the identification, avoidance, management and mitigation of risk in, or from, cyber space. The risk concerns harm and damage that might occur as the result of everything from individual carelessness, to organised criminality, to industrial and national security espionage and, at the extreme end of the scale, to disabling attacks against a country's critical national infrastructure. However, there is much more to cyber space than vulnerability, risk, and threat. Cyber space security is an issue of strategy, both commercial and technological, and whose breadth spans the international, regional, national, and personal. It is a matter of hazard and vulnerability, as much as an opportunity for social, economic and cultural growth. Consistent with this outlook, The Oxford Handbook of Cyber Security takes a comprehensive and rounded approach to the still evolving topic of cyber security. The structure of the Handbook is intended to demonstrate how the scope of cyber security is beyond threat, vulnerability, and conflict and how it manifests on many levels of human interaction. An understanding of cyber security requires us to think not just in terms of policy and strategy, but also in terms of technology, economy, sociology, criminology, trade, and morality. Accordingly, contributors to the Handbook include experts in cyber security from around the world, offering a wide range of perspectives: former government officials, private sector executives, technologists, political scientists, strategists, lawyers, criminologists, ethicists, security consultants, and policy analysts.

SOMMARIO
1 - The Origins of Cyberspace2 - Opportunity, Threat and Dependency in the Social Infosphere3 - A Political History of Cyberspace4 - Cyber Power in International Relations5 - Ethical Standards and 'Communication' Technologies6 - Cybercrime: Thieves, Swindlers, Bandits and Privateers in Cyberspace7 - Making Sense of Cybersecurity in Emerging Technology Areas8 - Assessing Harm from Cyber Crime9 - Toward a Vulnerability Mitigation Model.10 - Managing Risk: Terrorism, Violent Extremism and Anti-Democratic Tendencies in the Digital Space11 - Cyberweapons12 - Intentions and Cyberterrorism13 - Technology: Access and Denial14 - Cyber Espionage15 - Cyberwar Redux16 - On Cyber-Enabled Information Warfare and Information Operations17 - The Deterrence and Prevention of Cyber Conflict18 - Stepping out of the Shadow: Computer Security Incident Response Teams in the Cybersecurity Ecosystem19 - Cybersecurity Information Sharing: Voluntary Beginnings and a Mandatory Future20 - Data Privacy and Security Law21 - The Insider Threat and the Insider Advocate22 - Personal Protection: Cyber Hygiene23 - Online Child Safety24 - Educating for Cyber Security25 - Cyber Security, Human Rights and Empiricism: The Case of Digital Surveillance26 - Securing the Critical National Infrastructure27 - The Role of Defence in National Cyber Security28 - Cyber Security Capacity Building29 - Cyber Security, Multilateral Export Control, and Standard Setting Arrangements30 - Cyber Security, Global Commerce, and International Organisations31 - Global Trade and Cyber Security: Monitoring, Enforcement, and Sanctions32 - Semi-Formal Diplomacy: Track 1.5 and Track 233 - States, Proxies, and (Remote) Offensive Cyber Operations34 - Getting Beyond Norms: When Violating the Agreement Becomes Customary Practice35 - International Law for Cyber Space: Competition and Conflict36 - Community of Common Future in Cyberspace: The Proposal and Practice of China37 - Look West or Look Easta India at the Crossroads of Cyberspace38 - Cybersecurity in Israel: Organisation and Future Challenges39 - The Evolving Concept of the Japanese Security Strategy40 - Contextualizing Malaysia's Cybersecurity Agenda41 - The Russian Federation s Approach to Cyber Security42 - Rethinking the Governance of Technology in the Digital Age43 - Maturing Autonomous Cyber Weapons Systems: Implications for International Cyber Security and Autonomous Weapons Systems Regimes44 - The Future Human and Behavioural Challenges of Cyber Security45 - The Future of Democratic Civil Societies in a Post-Western Cybered Era46 - Future Normative Challenges47 - Cybersecurity' and 'Development': Contested Futures48 - Project Solarium 1953 and the Cyberspace Solarium Commission 2019

AUTORE
Paul Cornish was educated at St Andrews, LSE, and Cambridge Universities. He has served in the British Army and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, and has worked at research institutes including Chatham House, the UK Defence Academy, the Centre for Defence Studies (King's College London), RAND Europe, and the Universities of Cambridge, Bath, and Exeter. His work covers international security, national strategy, arms control, the ethics of armed force, civil-military relations and cyber security. He was Co-Director of the Cyber Security Capacity Building Centre at Oxford University, 2013-18, and Professorial Fellow at the Australian National University, 2017. He is Visiting Professor at LSE IDEAS, London School of Economics.

ALTRE INFORMAZIONI
  • Condizione: Nuovo
  • ISBN: 9780198800682
  • Collana: Oxford Handbooks
  • Dimensioni: 252 x 59.0 x 176 mm Ø 1672 gr
  • Formato: Copertina rigida
  • Pagine Arabe: 890