Foreign meddling in democratic elections, the proliferation of fake news and threats to national security through the ‘weaponisation of social media’ will be tackled by a new research Centre launched last week at Flinders University.
The Jeff Bleich Centre for the US Alliance in Digital Technology, Security, and Governance will be the first research centre in Australia to adopt a multidisciplinary approach to social science by bringing together the three key areas of technology, security and governance.
The Centre will undertake research in areas of mutual concern to Australia and the US to improve the capacity of governments and industry to respond to these cyber challenges and threats.
This includes digital media manipulation in fostering divisions in civil society, challenging national security and contesting democratic governance.
The Centre’s launch coincides with the release of the latest Lowy Institute Annual Poll ranking cyber security as the most significant threat to Australia’s vital interests after climate change.
The Jeff Bleich Centre is named in honour of Ambassador Jeff Bleich, Special Counsel to President Barack Obama and a diplomat who served as Ambassador to Australia from 2009 to 2013.
According to Vice-Chancellor Professor Colin Stirling, the Centre will create opportunities for industry, particularly defence, government and NGOs to work with Flinders University to address current and emerging issues in cybersecurity.
“It will consolidate Flinders University’s research expertise and strengths in digital technologies, security and governance, and build upon Flinders existing strengths in US policy studies and the university’s strong US alliance,” Professor Stirling said.
“The Jeff Bleich Centre will undertake research to identify reforms, including regulatory models, that preserve the gains of the digital revolution, but enhance the protection of democratic freedoms, and restore trust in the institutions of democratic societies.”
The digital revolution has initiated societal change on a scale comparable to the invention of the printing press and the arrival of the industrial revolution, but while the cyber revolution offers incalculable benefit, there have also been high costs.
The disruptive costs of the digital revolution on democracy have been high, largely unanticipated and only recently addressed as some have escalated into crises.
Ambassador Bleich says these have included deliberate efforts to impair individual, corporate and government decision-making through corrupt, distorted, or false information campaigns.
“We know that the advent of digital technology has fundamentally changed the way we each work, eat, shop, and live. But it has also changed our societies and how we defend ourselves.
“Our nations — both separately and together—must operate in new ways to preserve our values and protect our people and allies in new battle spaces.
“This is the mission of the Jeff Bleich Centre for the US Alliance in Digital Technology, Security, and Governance.”