Thank you to everyone who applied to take part in our mentorship programme!
We're extremely excited to read through your proposals, and continue the important work of increasing the diversity of voices in cyber policy.
📚This issue concludes with two book reviews:
📖Security in the Cyber Age: An Introduction to Policy and Technology (Derek Reveron and John Savage)
&
📖The Tech Coup: How to Save Democracy from Silicon Valley (Marietje Schaake)
🧵 (10/10)
🚨New Issue out now!
There is a paradox at the heart of AI governance - as it becomes more consequential, it is becoming harder to agree on what exactly is being governed.
Issue 10.2 brings together a range of perspectives and arguments on #AIGovernance 🌐
🧵 (1/10)
🎤Beyond the special section - In 'The last call for authenticity: AI reshaping the voice fraud landscape' by @MrSobolev, he calls for updated technical standards, behavioural adaptation and greater societal resilience
🔗https://t.co/lOEVa69qOK
🧵(9/10)
🎉As the Journal of Cyber Policy celebrates its tenth anniversary, we are pleased to mark the beginning of a new chapter. The Journal’s editorial leadership is transitioning from Chatham House back to its publisher, Taylor & Francis.
(1/4)
🚀 We look forward to seeing the Journal continue to shape the field of cyber policy in the years ahead. We are also deeply grateful to everyone who has contributed to its growth and impact over the past decade, including members of the editorial board. (3/4)
📝 Tim Stevens will serve as Editor-in-Chief, joined by Associate Editors André Barrinha, Roxana Radu, and Noran Shafik Fouad. Chatham House will retain a seat on the editorial board and will continue to edit the next two issues. (2/5)
This issue features two book reviews on
📖The Gilded Cage: Technology, Development, and State Capitalism in China by Ya-Wen Lei, reviewed by Brandon Williams
And
📖The Private Is Political: Networked Privacy and Social Media by Alice Marwick, reviewed by Isabella Wilkinson
🧵8/8
🚨New Issue Out Now!
2025 marks the 10th anniversary of @CHCyberPolicy. Kicking off this volume, Issue 10.1 both reflects new policy themes and provides new treatment on perennial topics such as encryption, cyber preparedness, ethics in digital criminology, and more🌐
🧵1/8
‘Stuxnet, revisited (again): producing the strategic relevance of cyber operations’ by @ClaudiaEmilie argues that the Stuxnet attack on Iran catalysed a paradigm shift in how cyber operations are perceived strategically
https://t.co/YLwZUDVc9p
🧵7/8