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Information Revolution and National Security by Thomas E. Copeland β€” book cover

Information Revolution and National Security

by Thomas E. Copeland
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Overview

The current era has seen more rapid and extensive change than any time in human history. The profusion of information and the explosion of information technology is the driver, reshaping all aspects of social, political, cultural, and economic life. The effects of the information revolution are particularly profound in the realm of national security strategy. They are creating new opportunities for those who master them. The U.S. military, for instance, is exploring ways to seize information superiority during conflicts and thus gain decisive advantages over its opponents. But the information revolution also creates new security threats and vulnerabilities. No nation has made more effective use of the information revolution than the United States, but none is more dependent on information technology. To protect American security, then, military leaders and defense policymakers must understand the information revolution.
The essays in this volume are intended to contribute to such an understanding. They grew from a December 1999 conference co-sponsored by the U.S. Army War College Strategic Studies Institute and the University of Pittsburgh Matthew B. Ridgway Center for International Security Studies. The conference brought together some of the foremost members of the academic strategic studies community with representatives of the U.S. Government and U.S. military. As could be expected when examining a topic as complex as the relationship between the information revolution and national security, the presentations and discussions were far-ranging, covering such issues as the global implications of the information revolution, the need for a national information security strategy, and the role of information in U.S. military operations. While many more questions than answers emerged, the conference did suggest some vital tasks that military leaders and defense policymakers must undertake. The Strategic Studies Institute is pleased to offer the essays as part of the vital national debate over the changing nature of security in the information age.
Douglas C. Lovelace, Jr.
Director, Strategic Studies Institute

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Book Details

Published
January 1, 2005
Publisher
University Press of the Pacific
Pages
152
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781410219466

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