Building an International Cybersecurity Regime

Hardback

Building an International Cybersecurity Regime

Multistakeholder Diplomacy

9781035301539 Edward Elgar Publishing
Edited by Ian Johnstone, Professor of International Law, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, US, Arun Sukumar, Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, The Hague Program on International Cyber Security, Leiden University, the Netherlands and Joel Trachtman, Professor of International Law and Henry Braker Professor of Commercial Law, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, US
Publication Date: 2023 ISBN: 978 1 03530 153 9 Extent: 282 pp
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 License. It is free to read, download and share on Elgaronline.com.

Providing a much-needed study on cybersecurity regime building, this comprehensive book is a detailed analysis of cybersecurity norm-making processes and country positions, through the lens of multi-stakeholder diplomacy. Multidisciplinary and multinational scholars and practitioners use insights drawn from high-level discussion groups to provide a rigorous analysis of how major cyber powers view multi-stakeholder diplomacy.

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Critical Acclaim
Contributors
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Providing a much-needed study on cybersecurity regime building, this comprehensive book is a detailed analysis of cybersecurity norm-making processes and country positions, through the lens of multi-stakeholder diplomacy. Multidisciplinary and multinational scholars and practitioners use insights drawn from high-level discussion groups to provide a rigorous analysis of how major cyber powers view multi-stakeholder diplomacy.

Looking at how past cybersecurity initiatives and multi-stakeholder negotiations in other fields illuminate its dynamics, this book will help put states'' approaches towards multi-stakeholder cyber diplomacy into perspective, and frame the role of private actors in cybersecurity regime building. Evaluating the most promising institutional arrangements and mechanisms for implementing cybersecurity, this book combines top-down analyses relevant to the design of international cybersecurity regimes with bottom-up case studies, tracing the approaches of important states towards multi-stakeholder participation in cyber diplomacy.

With a wealth of policy-relevant findings, this book will be welcomed by practitioners and scholars of international law, international organization and international cybersecurity as well as multi-stakeholder governance and multilateral regimes. Policymakers and diplomats involved in international cybersecurity processes will also benefit from its cutting-edge comparative analysis of the approaches of key cyber powers.

Critical Acclaim
‘This book thoughtfully unpacks the complex web of multistakeholder cyber diplomacy even as its parameters, participants, and paradoxes continue to evolve.’
– Elina Noor, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington DC, US

‘Essential reading for states and stakeholders engaged with the geopolitics of cyberspace, this expertly edited volume offers readers a descriptive catalog for how multistakeholder cyber diplomacy has interacted with—and travelled alongside—rising multilateral mechanisms for global governance of cybersecurity while identifying various next steps for making multistakeholderism more effective in securing cyberspace’s future.’
– Duncan B. Hollis, Temple University School of Law, US
Contributors
Contributors: Arindrajit Basu, Carlos Affonso de Souza, Ian Johnstone, Marina Kaljurand, Jinhe Liu, Christopher Painter, Christian Perrone, Andrey Shcherbovich, Arun Sukumar, Joel Trachtman, Josephine Wolff
Contents
Contents
List of contributors vii

PART I INTRODUCTION
1 Building cybersecurity through multistakeholder
diplomacy: Politics, processes, and prospects 2
Ian Johnstone, Arun Sukumar and Joel Trachtman

PART II THEMATIC ISSUES
2 The geopolitics of multistakeholder cyber diplomacy:
A comparative analysis 20
Arun Sukumar
3 Multistakeholder characteristics of past and ongoing
cybersecurity norms processes 59
Josephine Wolff
4 Developing multistakeholder structures for cybersecurity
norms: Learning from experience 85
Joel Trachtman
5 Implementing cybersecurity norms: The design of
international institutions 111
Ian Johnstone

PART III COUNTRY PERSPECTIVES
6 U.S. multistakeholder engagement in cyber stability issues 143
Christopher Painter
7 Russia’s participation in multistakeholder diplomacy for
cybersecurity norms 165
Andrey Shcherbovich
8 Rethinking Chinese multistakeholder governance of cybersecurity 185
Jinhe Liu
9 India’s “passive” multistakeholder cyber diplomacy 201
Arindrajit Basu
10 Brazil and multistakeholder diplomacy for the Internet:
Past achievements, current challenges and the road ahead 220
Carlos Affonso de Souza and Christian Perrone
11 Taking stock of Estonia’s multistakeholder cyber diplomacy 238
Marina Kaljurand

PART IV CONCLUSION
12 The way ahead for multistakeholder cyber diplomacy 257
Ian Johnstone, Arun Sukumar and Joel Trachtman

Index 266
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