Sensing and Shaping Emerging Conflicts

Sensing and Shaping Emerging Conflicts

Title: Sensing and Shaping Emerging Conflicts
Author: Andrew Robertson, Steve Olson, National Academy of Engineering & United States Institute of Peace
Release: 2013-06-19
Kind: ebook
Genre: Engineering, Books, Professional & Technical, Politics & Current Events
Size: 359734
Technology has revolutionized many aspects of modern life, from how businesses operate, to how people get information, to how countries wage war. Certain technologies in particular, including not only cell phones and the Internet but also satellites, drones, and sensors of various kinds, are transforming the work of mitigating conflict and building peaceful societies. Rapid increases in the capabilities and availability of digital technologies have put powerful communications devices in the hands of most of the world's population. These technologies enable one-to-one and one-to-many flows of information, connecting people in conflict settings to individuals and groups outside those settings and, conversely, linking humanitarian organizations to people threatened by violence. Communications within groups have also intensified and diversified as the group members use new technologies to exchange text, images, video, and audio. Monitoring and analysis of the flow and content of this information can yield insights into how violence can be prevented or mitigated. In this way technologies and the resulting information can be used to detect and analyze, or sense, impending conflict or developments in ongoing conflict. On October 11, 2012, the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) and the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) held a workshop in Washington, DC, to identify "major opportunities and impediments to providing better real-time information to actors directly involved in situations that could lead to deadly violence." The workshop brought together experts in technology, experts in peacebuilding, and people who have worked at the intersections of those two fields on the applications of technology in conflict settings, to consider uses of technology to sense emerging and ongoing conflicts and provide information and analyses that can be used to prevent violent and deadly conflict. Sensing and Shaping Emerging Conflicts: Report of a Joint Workshop of the National Academy of Engineering and the United States Institute of Peace: Roundtable on Technology, Science, and Peacebuilding summarizes the workshop.

More Books from Andrew Robertson, Steve Olson, National Academy of Engineering & United States Institute of Peace

Andrew Robertson
Andrew Robertson
Andrew Robertson
Shebat Legion, Dianne Tchir, Alan Torok, Marko Katic, James McCuaig, Joel Eisenberg, Nettie Eisenberg, Jocelyn Williams, Michael H. Hanson, Daniel Arthur Smith, Rivka Jacobs, Andrew Robertson, Randy Michaud, Michael S. Walker, Carmilla Voiez, Deanne Charlton, Lorinda Taylor, ZZ Claybourne, P.K. Tyler, Phoebe Tsang, Rebecca Poole, Scott Carruba, Ken Tizzard, Milton Davies, Marilynn Carter, Peter Bergerson, Dr. Kent David Tisher, Jef Rouner, Erika M Szabo, Brent Meske, Beverly Alexander Vye, Skye Knizley, Debbie Starrett, Ann Stolinsky, Nellie Smith, Brian Finley, Nely Cab, Joe DeRouen, Jessica West, Beth Patterson, Robert Allen Lupton, Paul DeThroe, Julie Dundas, Gregg Chamberlain, D. S. Foster, Mike Casto, Latika Karani, Faith Marlow, Baer Charlton, Elizabeth S. Wolf, Duncan Swallow, Charles Barouch, Joe Bonadonna, Justin Sandler, Rue Volley, Andrew K. Tempest, Margaret R. Blake, Teresa Carawan, Anita Reeder Hardister, Theresa Nyenhuis, Lissette E. Manning, Janice Bell, John H. Howard, Mary McGillis, Gwyndyn Alexander & Samuel Peralta
L.F. Neal & Andrew Robertson
Andrew Robertson, National Academy of Engineering & United States Institute of Peace
Andrew Robertson
Andrew Robertson & Michael Tilbury
Andrew Robertson
Andrew Robertson & Michael Tilbury
Andrew Robertson & Frederic Vitart
Andrew Robertson
Andrew Robertson & Hang Wu Tang
Donal Nolan & Andrew Robertson
Andrew Robertson & James Goudkamp
Sarah Worthington, Andrew Robertson & Graham Virgo
Andrew Robertson, Steve Olson, National Academy of Engineering & United States Institute of Peace
Andrew Robertson