Cybersecurity in humanities and social sciences: A research methods approach
Material type:
TextLanguage: English Publication details: New Jersey: Wiley Data and Cybersecurity, 2020. Edition: 1st edDescription: xiv, 214pISBN: 9781119777571Subject(s): Cybersecurity in the Human and Social Sciences | Typologies, Taxonomies and Ontologies of Cybersecurity | Cybersecurity and Information Warfare ResearchDDC classification: 005.8 Online resources: Click here to access online
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| e-Books | Dr. S. R. Ranganathan Library Ebook (Online Access) | 005.8 (Online Access) (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | EB0106 |
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| 005.8 (Online Access) Cyber-vigilance and digital trust: cyber security in the era of cloud computing and IoT | 005.8 (Online Access) Cybersecurity blue team toolkit | 005.8 (Online Access) Cybersecurity essentials | 005.8 (Online Access) Cybersecurity in humanities and social sciences: A research methods approach | 005.8 (Online Access) Cybersecurity in smart homes: architectures, solutions and technologies | 005.8 (Online Access) Cybersecurity of industrial systems | 005.8 (Online Access) Cybersecurity risk management: mastering the fundamentals using the NIST cybersecurity framework |
The humanities and social sciences are interested in the cybersecurity object since its emergence in the security debates, at the beginning of the 2000s. This scientific production is thus still relatively young, but diversified, mobilizing at the same time political science, international relations, sociology , law, information science, security studies, surveillance studies, strategic studies, polemology. There is, however, no actual cybersecurity studies. After two decades of scientific production on this subject, we thought it essential to take stock of the research methods that could be mobilized, imagined and invented by the researchers. The research methodology on the subject "cybersecurity" has, paradoxically, been the subject of relatively few publications to date. This dimension is essential. It is the initial phase by which any researcher, seasoned or young doctoral student, must pass, to define his subject of study, delimit the contours, ask the research questions, and choose the methods of treatment. It is this methodological dimension that our book proposes to treat. The questions the authors were asked to answer were: how can cybersecurity be defined? What disciplines in the humanities and social sciences are studying, and how, cybersecurity? What is the place of pluralism or interdisciplinarity? How are the research topics chosen, the questions defined? How, concretely, to study cybersecurity: tools, methods, theories, organization of research, research fields, data ...? How are discipline-specific theories useful for understanding and studying cybersecurity? Has cybersecurity had an impact on scientific theories?