New information and communication technologies, such as the Internet, are widely believed to be transforming world politics. While these transformations have brought about important challenges to state power and authority, they have not eliminated power politics and the quest for security and competitive advantage among actors on the world stage. Today, states and non-state actors alike are seeking ways to exploit information and information systems to pursue political objectives. The control of information has long been widely seen as a source of political power, and is manifest today in competition over both the media and the messages of the global communications environment. From the filtering and interception of Internet traffic to the circulation of home-made videos by militant Islamists, a new geopolitics of information and communication technologies is underway.
The Geopolitics of ICTs course is an intensive examination of the ways in which states and non-state actors are contesting the newly evolving terrain of global digital-electronic-telecommunications. Topics covered include Internet censorship and surveillance, information warfare, computer network attacks, hacktivism, and governance of global communications. The course is organized as a series of intensive modules. One feature of the class will be a “hands-on” analysis of censorship circumvention and network interrogation techniques at the Citizen Lab (http://www.citizenlab.org/).
Assignments
There will be two written, related assignments for Pol 2240/486. The assignments are focused on a detailed investigation of a conflict you choose from a list provided at the beginning of term. The first will be a detailed chronology and annotated bibliography of the conflict case, worth 30% of your final grade. It is due on the last week of class in the first term. The chronology and annotated bibliography will be made up of data and sources that inform the research for the second assignment. The second assignment is a major research paper worth 50% of the final grade, and it is due the last week of class.
Grading
Summary:
1) First term written assignment (30%): December 3rd, 2008
2) Second term written assignment (50%): April 8th, 2009
3) Participation and presentations (20%)
Class Participation
As the course is organized as a seminar, class participation is vital and worth 20% of the mark. Each week that we meet, you will be expected to come to class having read the required material and prepared to discuss it critically. For each seminar, you will prepare a one page bullet-point summary of the main points you have derived from the readings as well as any critical commentaries you wish to make. These bullet-point summaries plus your class comments will form the basis of your participation mark.
Click on the Lecture Schedule link to the left to access the readings
There are no required texts for this course. All readings and links are online.
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This Month
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Monday, August 11
Monday, January 25
by
anonymous
on Mon 25 Jan 2010 11:26 AM EST
Hi class
Just a reminder that the January 26th seminar is cancelled. Regards RD Tuesday, September 15
by
anonymous
on Tue 15 Sep 2009 03:55 PM EDT
Hello Class
It was great to meet and talk today. We have a big class but will make it work. I neglected to mention three important items 1. The readings scheduled for this week are only for background. You can post your comments beginning next week for the readings that are scheduled then. You do not need to post comments for the first week. 2. You need to register on this site to be able to leave comments. Register using a username and password you will remember, click on "receive email notifications" when you register, that way you'll be notified of updates to the website. 3. Please email me at r.deibert (at) utoronto.ca so that I can generate a class email list. Thanks RD |
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