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Author:
Ronfeldt, David F., author.
Title:
Whose story wins : rise of the noosphere, noopolitik, and information-age statecraft / David Ronfeldt, John Arquilla.
Publisher:
RAND Corporation,
Copyright Date:
2020
Description:
xvi, 99 pages ; 26 cm
Subject:
International relations.
Information society.
Telematics--Social aspects.
Geopolitics--United States.
Information technology--Political aspects.
Political science.
Information policy--United States.
United States--Foreign relations--21st century.
United States--Foreign relations--1989-
Relations internationales.
Societe informatisee.
Geopolitique--Etats-Unis.
Technologie de l'information--Aspect politique.
Information--Politique gouvernementale--Etats-Unis.
Etats-Unis--Relations exterieures--21e siecle.
Etats-Unis--Relations exterieures--1989-
international relations.
Diplomatic relations
Geopolitics
Information policy
Information society
Information technology--Political aspects
International relations
Political science
Telematics--Social aspects
United States
Since 1989
Other Authors:
Arquilla, John, author.
International Security and Defense Policy Center.
Rand Corporation.
Notes:
"July 2020." Includes bibliographical references (pages 79-98).
Contents:
Looking Back, Looking Ahead: America's Conceptual Arsenal -- Origins and Attributes of the Noosphere Concept -- Propagation of the Noosphere Concept in Recent Decades -- From Rethinking the Noosphere to Rethinking Noopolitik -- Contrasting Paradigms: Evolving from Realpolitik to Noopolitik -- A Pessimistic Appraisal of Today's Turmoil for the Noosphere and Noopolitik -- Hope for the Noosphere and Noopolitik: The Global Commons -- Getting Back on Track Through Noopolitik.
Summary:
In this Perspective, the authors urge strategists to consider a new concept for adapting U.S. grand strategy to the information age-noopolitik, which favors the use of "soft power"--As a successor to realpolitik, with its emphasis on "hard power." The authors illuminate how U.S. adversaries are already deploying dark forms of noopolitik-e.g., weaponized narratives, strategic deception, epistemic attacks. The authors propose new ways to fight back and discuss how the future of noopolitik might depend on what happens to the global commons-i.e., the parts of the Earth and space that fall outside national jurisdictions and to which all nations are supposed to have access. The authors expand on many of the ideas they first proposed in a 1999 RAND Corporation report titled The Emergence of Noopolitik: Toward an American Information Strategy, in which they describe the emergence of a new globe-circling realm: the noosphere. The authors explain that Earth first developed a geosphere, a geological mantle, and then a biosphere, consisting of plant and animal life. Third to develop will be the noosphere, a global "thinking circuit" and "realm of the mind"-a collective form of intelligence enabled by the digital information revolution. As the noosphere expands, it will profoundly affect statecraft; the conditions favoring traditional realpolitik strategies will erode, and the prospects for noopolitik strategies will grow. Thus, the decisive factor in today's and tomorrow's wars of ideas is bound to be "whose story wins"-the essence of noopolitik. To improve prospects for the noosphere and noopolitik, U.S. policy and strategy should, among other initiatives, treat the global commons as a pivotal issue area, uphold "guarded openness" as a guiding principle, and institute a requirement for periodic reviews of America's "information posture."
Series:
Perspective : expert insights on a timely policy issue ; PE-A237-1
ISBN:
9781977405302
1977405304
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1192324122
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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