
Cybersicherheit und Rollenwandel
- 1 June 2018
- Schünemann, Wolf J.; Harnisch, Sebastian; Artmann, Stefan
- DE
The US’ loss of reputation due to the Snowden-revelations did not lead to a change in cooperative behaviour in cybersecurity politics. This article explains this by pointing out the continuity in role attribution by allied governments and thereby links role theoretical IR-research with quantitative and qualitative instruments from discourse analysis. The US, as “basic service provider”, “idea-structure provider”, and “protector”, have adopted the role-set of a “custodian” during the decades of the evolution of the internet. This paper shows that these roles never saw veritable contestation by government actors. Hence, no change in the US’ role in international cybersecurity politics and internet governance took place.
More external publications
- Research and Analysis

22 August 2025
In this article, Annegret Bendiek and Jakob Bund analyse how authoritarian states use hybrid state/non-state networks to challenge Europe through obfuscating responsibility and escalating conflicts; Bendiek and Bund argue that the EU must reform its cybersecurity policy under a “Janus Principle” to strengthen resilience, coordination, and strategic effectiveness.

3 June 2023
In this research paper, Mika Kerttunen argues that while cyber operations may be relatively ineffective for conducting war, their peacetime employment can contribute to the outbreak of conflict due to their violent nature.