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Palgrave Macmillan

Cyberwar, Netwar and the Revolution in Military Affairs

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  • © 2006

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Table of contents (15 chapters)

  1. Cyberwar, Netwar and the Revolution in Military Affairs: Defining the Issues

  2. Implications of the Problem

  3. Country Perspectives

  4. What is Being Done — or Must Be Done?

About this book

The end of the Cold War, the Revolution in Military Affairs, 9/11 and the War on Terror have radically altered the nature of conflict and security in the Twenty-first Century. This book considers how developments in technology effect the prosecution of war and what the changing nature of warfare means for human rights and civil society.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Leeds Metropolitan University, UK

    Edward Halpin, Philippa Trevorrow, David Webb, Steve Wright

About the editors

MARTIN BAYER Correspondent for Germany for Jane's Defence Weekly GARY CHAPMAN Director of 'The 21st Century Project', University of Texas, USA GEOFFREY DARNTON Head of Knowledge Transfer, Institute of Business and Law, University of Bournemouth and Programme Leader for the MA in Information Systems Management, University of Bournemouth, UK STEFAN FRITSCH Lecturer in International Relations, Department of History and Political Science, University of Salzburg, Austria GUS HOSEIN Visiting Fellow, Department of Information Systems, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK BRUCE D. LARKIN Professor Emeritus of Politics, University of California, USA DIEGO LATELLA Lecturer, Department of Computer Science, University of Pisa, Italy MASSIMO MAURO Principal Administrator, Council of the European Union, Directorate-General C 1 (Internal Market) MIKE MOORE Contributing Editor of The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists PETER G. NEUMANN Principal Scientist, Computer Science Laboratory, SRI International, USA FANOURIOS PANTELOGIANNIS Research Fellow JARI RANTAPELKONEN Information Operations Instructor, National Defence College, Finland CARLO SCHAERF Professor of Physics, University of Rome, Italy GIAN PIERO SIROLI Lecturer in Computer and Network Security, Department of Physics, University of Bologna, Italy CHRIS WU Chief Editor of China Affairs and a Research Fellow at the Centre for Modern China

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