
Never Have So Many Possessed The Means To Be So Lethal. The Diffusion Of Modern Technology (robotics, Cyber Weapons, 3-d Printing, Autonomous Systems, And Artificial Intelligence) To Ordinary People Has Given Them Access To Weapons Of Mass Violence Previously Monopolized By The State. In Recent Years, States Have Attempted To Stem The Flow Of Such Weapons To Individuals And Non-state Groups, But Their Efforts Are Failing. As Audrey Kurth Cronin Explains In Power To The People, What We Are Seeing Now Is An Exacerbation Of An Age-old Trend. Over The Centuries, The Most Surprising Developments In Warfare Have Occurred Because Of Advances In Technologies Combined With Changes In Who Can Use Them. Indeed, Accessible Innovations In Destructive Force Have Long Driven New Patterns Of Political Violence. When Nobel Invented Dynamite And Kalashnikov Designed The Ak-47, Each Inadvertently Spurred Terrorist And Insurgent Movements That Killed Millions And Upended The International System. That History Illuminates Our Own Situation, In Which Emerging Technologies Are Altering Society And Redistributing Power. The Twenty-first Century Sharing Economy Has Already Disrupted Every Institution, Including The Armed Forces. New Open Technologies Are Transforming Access To The Means Of Violence. Just As Importantly, Higher-order Functions That Previously Had Been Exclusively Under State Military Control - Mass Mobilization, Force Projection, And Systems Integration - Are Being Harnessed By Non-state Actors. Cronin Closes By Focusing On How To Respond So That We Both Preserve The Benefits Of Emerging Technologies Yet Reduce The Risks. Power, In The Form Of Lethal Technology, Is Flowing To The People, But The Same Technologies That Empower Can Imperil Global Security - Unless We Act Strategically.
This book investigates how the democratization of advanced technology is shifting the monopoly on lethal force from states to individuals and non-state actors. Audrey Kurth Cronin, a professor and expert in security studies, utilizes historical analysis and contemporary data to argue that the current proliferation of robotics, cyber weapons, and AI mirrors past technological disruptions like dynamite and the AK-47. She posits that the sharing economy and open-source innovation have fundamentally altered the landscape of global security, requiring a strategic re-evaluation of how societies manage the risks of accessible destructive power.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in international security identify this work as a significant contribution to understanding the intersection of emerging technology and political violence. Readers frequently note the clarity of the author's historical framework and the urgency of her analysis regarding modern security threats.
Page Count:
352
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190882158
ISBN-13:
9780190882150
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