Patching the Liberal World Order: How Can International Cooperation Pwn Emerging Cyber Challenges? - Hosted by the European Studies Center

Date

July 19, 2018 - 9:15am to July 20, 2018 - 12:00pm

Patching the Liberal World Order: How Can International Cooperation Pwn Emerging Cyber Challenges?

Smartphone with security icon

Program Description

The computing and digital revolutions have created new tools and capabilities that are challenging the liberal world order. If the Cold War was an era of static state superpowers, modern computing gives not only developed states but even a moderately trained rebel group their own superpowers: to teleport their presence around the globe, move vast sums of money instantly, and make evidence vanish. From Wikileaks to the hacking of elections, headlines across the democratic world have highlighted transnational cyber-enabled crime, violence and polarization. The goal of this workshop is to bring scholars together from a variety of backgrounds to discuss whether current concepts and theories are sufficient to suggest solutions to these cyber dilemmas, particularly for open liberal democracies. Topics would include current and emerging cyber security challenges like hacking, election manipulation and disinformation, cyber crime, online radicalization, as well as topics related to domestic and international trust and distrust, including intelligence cooperation, surveillance, repression, leaking and whistle-blowing, evolving alliance commitments and rivalries. One cross-cutting theme that will be of particular interest is how the tools and technologies maintained by international cooperation and liberal societies, such as the internet, open source software and free social media, are being used to undercut governance and bipartisanship; and what can be done about it.

 

Agenda

Thursday, July 19, 2018
William Pitt Union, Lower Lounge

9:15 a.m.
Welcome and Opening Remarks

9:30 a.m.
Anita Gohdes, University of Zurich, "The power of platforms: social media architecture, algorithms, and design in the context of contentious politics"

10:15 a.m.
Jim Walsh, UNC-Charlotte, "Autonomy, Credit and Blame"

11:30 a.m.
Baekkwan Park, University of Pittsburgh, "Conflict of Interest Editing on Wikipedia"

1:30 p.m.
Madelyn Sanfilippo, NYU, “Sociotechnical polycentric governance of cybersecurity”

2:15 p.m.
Mark Crescenzi, UNC-Chapel Hill, “Blockchain Accounting as a Mechanism for Trust and Reputation Building in International Relations”

3:30 p.m.
Nils Weidmann, University of Konstanz

 

Friday, July 20, 2018
156 Cathedral of Learning, Croghan-Schenley Room

9:30 a.m.
Setting the Agenda

9:45 a.m.
Michael Colaresi, University of Pittsburgh, “Building Democratic Resilience to Adversarial Digital Disinformation Campaigns Across NATO Members and Partners”

11:00 a.m.
Planning and Next Steps

12:00 p.m.
Adjourn

EU FlagThe organizers are grateful for generous funding by Pitt Cyber Institute, Dietrich School of Arts & Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Office of the Provost, the University Center for International Studies, and the European Union through the Jean Monnet Center of Excellence Grant.

Public welcome, but space is limited. Please contact Pitt Cyber at cyber@pitt.edu, to indicate your interst in attending.

Location and Address

University of Pittsburgh

William Pitt Union, Lower Lounge

3959 Fifth Ave

Pittsburgh, PA 15213