scholarly journals Cyberspace: Key Properties and Traits

2021 ◽  
Vol 2096 (1) ◽  
pp. 012039
Author(s):  
V Kh Fedorov ◽  
E G Balenko ◽  
Yu I Starodubtsev ◽  
P V Zakalkin

Abstract Backbone telecom networks have become one, which created an artificially global space known as cyberspace. The very emergence of such a complex space calls for detailed investigation and making a thesaurus. This paper is an attempt to create a terminology base applicable to the concept.

2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-112
Author(s):  
Anna Teekell

Kate O'Brien's 1943 The Last of Summer has been read as the novelist's riposte to an insular island that stifled both her publishing (through censorship) and her imagination (through cultural conservatism). Set on the eve of the neutral ‘Emergency’, O'Brien's sixth novel actually depicts Ireland as a complex space of negotiation, simultaneously desirable and condemnable, that challenges, rather than stifles, the individual imagination. The Last of Summer is a love triangle and a battle of wits, pitching a stage actress, the French ingénue Angèle, against an accomplished domestic performer, her potential mother-in-law, Hannah Kernahan. In the end, it is Hannah who wields ‘neutrality’ – both Ireland's in the war and her pretended neutrality in family matters – as a form of coercive power.


2019 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 67-73
Author(s):  
Yerzhan Zhanibekov ◽  

This article discusses the current trends of foreign policy of the regional powers towards Central Asia at the present stage. It also discusses new initiatives that involves Central Asia in the global space and its advantages to strengthen military-political and energy cooperationwith regional powers


Tellus ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 262-273 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. I. Dianov-KLOKOV ◽  
L. N. Yurganov

2021 ◽  
pp. 019145372110330
Author(s):  
Sandro Chignola

This article addresses the modern concept of sovereignty as a multivocal and conflictual semantic field, arguing for the necessity to trace its genealogy based on the structural tensions that haunt its logical framework – as well as its representations – rather than on a linear historiographic reconstruction. In particular, the scrutiny I propose aims to examine a series of exchanges that have been characterizing this concept since the beginning: the global and the European, the maritime and the territorial, the colony and the state, the imperial and the proprietary. The problematic balance between ‘imperium’ and ‘dominium’ is indeed assumed here as the turning point of the rise of a sovereign power that appears to be originally rooted in the very production and governance of the global space, thus giving up all possible Eurocentric narratives of modernity. To illustrate my argument, I focus on the frontispieces to three of Thomas Hobbes’s most important books, that is, his translation of Thucydides’ Peloponnesian Wars, De Cive and Leviathan. A thorough analysis of these images enables us to understand how these lines of force traverse the very heart of modern European political concepts, along with the mirroring effects that constantly bounce their normative construction of subjectivity back and forth from the periphery to the centre and, ultimately, from the market to the state.


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 ◽  
pp. 101598 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charlotte C. Goldman ◽  
Christopher P. Dall ◽  
Tamir Sholklapper ◽  
Jacob Brems ◽  
Keith Kowalczyk

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