TY - BOOK AU - Owen,Taylor TI - Disruptive power: the crisis of the state in the digital age T2 - Oxford studies in digital politics SN - 9780199363865 AV - JZ1254 .O84 2015 U1 - 327 23 PY - 2015/// CY - Oxford, New York PB - Oxford University Press KW - Technology and international relations KW - Internet and international relations KW - POLITICAL SCIENCE KW - International Relations KW - General KW - bisacsh KW - TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING KW - Electronics KW - Digital KW - BUSINESS & ECONOMICS KW - Industries KW - Media & Communications Industries KW - fast KW - Staatliche Einrichtung KW - gnd KW - Politische Institution KW - Digitale Revolution KW - Entmachtung KW - Politischer Konflikt KW - Internationale Politik KW - Internationella relationer KW - sao KW - Internet N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Losing control --; Disruptive power --; Spaces of dissent --; New money --; Being there --; Saving the saviors --; Diplomacy unbound --; The violence of algorithms --; The crisis of the state N2 - "Anonymous. WikiLeaks. The Syrian Electronic Army. Edward Snowden. Bitcoin. The Arab Spring. Digital communication technologies have thrust the calculus of global political power into a period of unprecedented complexity. In every aspect of international affairs, digitally enabled actors are changing the way the world works and disrupting the institutions that once held a monopoly on power. No area is immune: humanitarianism, war, diplomacy, finance, activism, or journalism. In each, the government departments, international organizations and corporations who for a century were in charge, are being challenged by a new breed of international actor. Online, networked and decentralized, these new actors are innovating, for both good and ill, in the austere world of foreign policy. They are representative of a wide range of 21st century global actors and a new form of 21st century power: disruptive power. In Disruptive Power, Taylor Owen provides a sweeping look at the way that digital technologies are shaking up the workings of the institutions that have traditionally controlled international affairs. The nation state system and the subsequent multinational system were founded on and have long functioned through a concentration of power in the state. Owen looks at the tools that a wide range of new actors are using to increasingly control international affairs, and how their rise changes the way we understand and act in the world. He considers the bar for success in international digital action and the negative consequences of a radically decentralized international system. What new institutions will be needed to moderate the new power structures and ensure accountability? And how can governments and corporations act to promote positive behavior in a world of disruptive innovation? Owen takes on these questions and more in this probing and sober look at the frontier of international affairs, in a world enabled by information technology and increasingly led by disruptive innovators. With cutting edge analysis of the fast-changing relationship between the declining state and increasingly powerful non-state actors, Disruptive Power is the essential road map for navigating a networked world"--; "In this book, Owen will provide a sweeping look at the way that digital technologies are disrupting the workings of the institutions that have traditionally controlled international affairs: humanitarianism, diplomacy, war, journalism, activism, and trade. The traditional nation state system and the subsequent multinational system were founded on and have long functioned through a concentration of power - through the military, currency controls, foreign policy, the rule of law, etc. In his book Owen argues that in every aspect of international affairs, the digitally enabled are changing the way the world works and disrupting the institutions that once held a monopoly on power. Following an introduction and digest of what constitutes the traditional state, each chapter of Owen's book will look at a different aspect of international affairs, profiling the disruptive innovators and demonstrating how they are challenging existing power structures for good and ill. He'll consider what constitutes successful online international action, what sorts of technologies are being used as well as what these technologies might look like a decade from now, and what new institutions will be needed to moderate the new power structures and ensure accountability. In sum, Owen aims to provide a road map for navigating a networked world"-- ER -