Title:
Explaining US Cybersecurity Policy Integration Through a National Regime Lens

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Author(s)
Farhat, Karim
Authors
Advisor(s)
Mueller, Milton L.
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Supplementary to
Abstract
This research uses the Policy Regime Framework to analyze which of two policy ‎problems, US-China rivalry or IT/OT convergence, better explain degrees of coherence ‎and integration in the US cybersecurity regime. It explains how regime actors address and ‎negotiate these problems across the ICT and energy sectors. A process-tracing ‎methodology was used to track outcomes and explanatory factors, linking causal ‎mechanisms through an analysis of the Congressional record and in-depth stakeholder ‎interviews. The results indicate how the idea of Chinese ICTs as a Trojan horse for the ‎Chinese Community Party’s strategy was more effective than IT/OT convergence at ‎mobilizing interests and advancing coherent cybersecurity policy. Trade and ICT policies ‎were successfully integrated to achieve cybersecurity goals as regime interests bargained ‎to 'weaponize' critical trade interdependencies through the US competitive advantage in ‎the semiconductor industry. This research lends further validity to the Policy Regime ‎Framework in researching cross-sector-spanning policy problems in the ICT space ‎especially given recent calls for whole-of-government approaches to address emerging ‎strategic technologies.‎
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Date Issued
2021-12-14
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Dissertation
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