JOURNAL ARTICLE

The socio-political dimensions of critical information infrastructure protection (CIIP)

Myriam Dunn

Year: 2005 Journal:   International Journal of Critical Infrastructures Vol: 1 (2/3)Pages: 258-258   Publisher: Inderscience Publishers

Abstract

At present, the topic of critical information infrastructure protection (CIIP) is mainly discussed in the domain of engineers, consultants, and IT security experts. All these communities address important aspects of the problem complex, but hardly ever deal with socio-political ones. This paper addresses the need for a greater role of the social sciences in the field, due to a range of important socio-political issues that have newly emerged. From a comparison of protection policies compiled in the recently published CIIP Handbook, it distills theoretical key issues and major challenges for the CIIP community with socio-political dimensions. In the process, it particularly targets the extensive problem of "conceptual sloppiness" that the community is culpable of. This conceptual negligence often leads to analytical negligence – with negative consequences for approaches to the issue in general and for the design of protection measures in particular.

Keywords:
Politics Computer security Political science Process (computing) Conceptual framework Sociology Management science Engineering ethics Public relations Public administration Risk analysis (engineering) Computer science Business Engineering Law Social science

Metrics

49
Cited By
6.94
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
6
Refs
0.96
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Infrastructure Resilience and Vulnerability Analysis
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Civil and Structural Engineering
Smart Grid Security and Resilience
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Control and Systems Engineering
Risk and Safety Analysis
Social Sciences →  Decision Sciences →  Statistics, Probability and Uncertainty
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