Citizen G'kar: Musings on Earth

October 07, 2004

NET POLITIK: How the Internet Affect World Politics?

NET POLITIK

Perhaps the most important imperative in Netpolitik is to recognize that it exists. The Internet and other information technologies are no longer a peripheral force in the conduct of world affairs but a powerful engine for change. Global electronic networking is not only remaking economies, but transforming people's values, identities, and social practices. Moreover, these changes are not just occurring within the boundaries of nation-states but in all sorts of unpredictable transnational communications.

It has been a gradual and subtle process, but the skillful use of new Internet venues by nonstate actors is altering some traditional notions of power in international relations. New types of soft power involving moral legitimacy and respect, credibility as an information source, and cultural values are coming to the fore. Military and financial powers that traditionally have belonged to the dominant nations are now constrained in new ways by soft power and the politics of credibility. A tighter skein of global interdependence may mean that unilateralism by any single nation, especially the United States, could be a more problematic policy approach.

This is a creative concept and certainly an articulate statement about some of what appears to be happening. I agree overall except for the use of "soft power" and the last statement. I can't see how we can assume somehow a free rapid exchange of ideas will hold the US accountable for unilateralism. I think not.

I think we have a couple of recent examples of how the net has lead to further isolation and intolerance of others ideas. Islamist Jihad in its most broad sense is being organized, canonized, and proselytized via the Internet. In addition, the scourge of the first half of this century, Nazism is being fostered again in Germany and worldwide via the Internet. I can’t see that as soft power.

Systems analysis may be applied to the effect of the Internet on worldwide political process. Open systems are known for their heterogeneity. Closed systems tend towards increasing homogeneity. Systems through time oscillate sometimes in patterns and sometimes chaotically.

Information overload tends to create a deviation amplifying process by which change accelerates and interacts until it is experienced as chaos. Certainly the Internet provides plenty of opportunity for information overload. When overloaded, we all look for ways to cut input. Some of us just turn off the computer. Some of us limit our information in systematic ways. When we chose a means to limit input is such a way to narrow the views represented in the ideas we expose ourselves to, we risk closing off the system within which we operate. The more closed the system, the more homogeneous our ideas become, and the more likely we lose touch with any level of accountability.

In other words, potentially, the Internet may accelerate the means by which political thought is polarized as well as create new opportunities for reciprocity. The end effect may be to speed up the rate of change and the perception of chaos. This may well lead to increasing acceleration of change beyond what most of us have experienced. Any bets on how most of us will react? I think most of us will pull back, cut stimulation, and limit our exposure to change just to survive with a sense of immediate control of events around us.

Politically, we may already be seeing the result of Netpolitik in the United States. We are more polarized than we have ever been. It seems to me the two party systems really struggles, perhaps for good ends, with this level of polarization. Parliamentary systems seem to “thrive” on it. The screaming and fist fights we see in Israel and Britain seem somehow less civilized than I like. However, the simplification of ideas in the two party system seems hardly to be a good alternative.

Suffice it to say, I think the jury is still out on the effect of the Internet on world events. I’d like to believe if people are more educated, things will become more universal. But inaccurate information may be more prevalent on the net than truth. Polarization seems to be the process of the day.



Complete Article, linked above.

Netpolitik: An Emerging Global Order


By Nick Lewis

Highlights from The Rise of Netpolitik, a report by the Aspen institute's Roundtable on Information Technology. This policy brief inspired me to create this blog. Until the current period—call it the Information Age, Communications Revolution, Third Wave, or Postindustrial Era—world affairs have been in the hands of diplomats and national leaders. Certainly long before Machiavelli wrote The Prince, diplomatic strategists sought to balance one state’s interest against another to achieve their own state’s purposes. Yet there is a sense that the old rules do not apply anymore.

This is a period of blurring borders, flattening hierarchies, and heightened

ambiguity. Those who are competitors and enemies one day are collaborators and allies the next. Those who stand alone, no matter what their strength, find even the smallest networks in opposition to be daunting. Something is different: the emergence, significance, and importance of the network structure within a world of complexity. The “life form” and organizational structure that is most in evidence in this new world of ideas and media is the network—social networks,electronic networks, media networks, to name a few.

To frame the global strategic questions, political leaders and leading thinkers have tended to gravitate to at least two different “worldview” approaches:

Realpolitik has been practiced over the past 500 years by historical luminaries such as Richelieu, Metternich, Bismarck, and Kissinger.Diplomats play political chess with nation-states, balancing and maneuvering one against the other to gain political advantage or equilibrium. This is a world of fault lines: the global alliances leading to the world wars, the subsequent Cold War, or the Clash of Civilizations suggested by Samuel Huntington.

Global Interdependence or “Liberal Internationalism” regards the world as moving to an intertwined world organism composed of international players—governmental and nongovernmental—for whom reality is interreliance among nations and cultures, economies and environments, and lack of control over many of the actions that affect one’s own locale. It recognizes that people belong to several communities at the same time, have multiple self-images and identities, and need to see themselves as world citizens as well. Here, informal diplomats use soft power, the attractive power of ideas, to survive or prevail.

Other frameworks have been suggested as well:

Mediapolitik: Lee Edwards describes the interrelationship between the mass media and world politics in liberal democratic, authoritarian, and totalitarian regimes. He suggests, as many observers have before, that “there is a strong but always shifting correlation among government, journalism, and public opinion in foreign policy making”. In essence, Edwards places the role of media as a central player in the conduct of world politics.

Cyberpolitik: David Rothkopf, suggests that “the realpolitik of the new era is cyberpolitik, inwhich the actors are no longer just states, and raw power can be countered or fortified by information power.”

Noopolitik: John Arquilla and David Ronfeld coined this term from Pierre Teilhard de Chardin’s concept of noosphere, the sphere of ideas. Noopolitik is an approach to statecraft,to be undertaken as much by non-state as by state actors, that emphasizes the role of soft power in expressing ideas, values, norms and ethics through all manner of media. It incorporates not only mass and cyber media but also the

concept of soft power and thought leadership in developing srategy on the world stage.

Netpolitik is still an unfolding doctrine. It seems to be characterized, however, by a higher velocity of information, new time pressures on thoughtful policymaking, a more robust pluralism in international affairs, and new challenges to the power of the nation-state and traditional diplomacy. Netpolitik seems to be a volatile force because of its great reach: affecting everything from the exercise of state power and military might to issues of deep personal identity and social values. We barely understand how the Internet is being used across the world; understanding how it is

remaking the conduct of international politics will require much more research, study, and debate.

Perhaps the most important imperative in Netpolitik is to recognize that it exists. The Internet and other information technologies are no longer a peripheral force in the conduct of world affairs but a powerful engine for change. Global electronic networking is not only remaking economies, but transforming people's values, identities, and social practices. Moreover, these changes are not just occurring within the boundaries of nation-states but in all sorts of unpredictable transnational communications.

It has been a gradual and subtle process, but the skillful use of new Internet venues by nonstate actors is altering some traditional notions of power in international relations. New types of soft power involving moral legitimacy and respect, credibility as an information source, and cultural values are coming to the fore. Military and financial powers that traditionally have belonged to the dominant nations are now constrained in new ways by soft power and the politics of credibility. A tighter skein of global interdependence may mean that unilateralism by any single nation, especially the United States, could be a more problematic policy approach.

Thanks to the Internet, more segments of the earth's inhabitants can now tell their stories. This is a significant development in human history. What may matter most in the future is our ability to hear each other's stories, learn from them, and perhaps develop a new global story.

Posted by Nick Lewis at 10/6/2004 05:53:18 PM

1 comment:

Nick Lewis said...

Excellent points; a lot of them are covered in the the actual 50 something page brief (follow the link above my post). The excerpts I posted were intended to get the blog alliance on the next level of thinking. But I see you are already there. I'm eating dinner right now, but check out the latest post at Net Politik. I'm attempting to create something a little more significant than a mere blog roll.