Modelling Hegemonic Power Transition in Cyberspace
Authored by Dmitry Brizhinev, Nathan Ryan, Roger Bradbury
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1155/2018/9306128
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Abstract
Cyberspace is the newest domain of conflict and cooperation between
states. In cyberspace, as in all other domains, land, sea, air, and
space, these interactions often lead to the emergence of hegemons which
are characterised by their predominant influence over global world order
and all other states. We examined the emergence and collapse of hegemons
in a modelled cyberspace world through the notions of power transition
and power diffusion. We used Repast Simphony to construct a simple
agent-based model (ABM) of a system of states interacting both
competitively and cooperatively in this world. Our simple model
parsimoniously captures the character of the real international system
of states through simple parameters of wealth and power determining the
outcome of attack or cooperation amongst pairwise interacting states. We
found hegemons of global world order emerged in cyberspace as they do in
the other traditional domains from models with these few parameters. And
we found that hegemons, contrary to traditional understanding, are not
exceptional states but merely occupy the tail of a continuous
distribution of power and lifetimes. We also found that hegemony in the
system depends on two perhaps unexpected parameters: the difficulty of
acquiring power as wealth increases and the amount of cooperation
between states. And as a consequence, we argue that cyberspace, as a
power-diffuse domain where cooperation is easier than elsewhere, is less
suited to the kind of hegemony we see in the traditional domains of
state interaction.
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