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Keeping the Peace in Cyberspace - Samuel White
Manage episode 326189095 series 2811139
In this episode, Dr Simon McKenzie talks with Samuel White about how cyber operations and information warfare are changing national security and the role of the military. They explore how the domestic legal architecture might prevent or enable tasking the military with responding to cyber threats, and what it might mean for the contemporary relevance of the prerogative powers.
Samuel White has served as a Royal Australian Infantry Corps and Australian Army Legal Corps officer. In 2018, he was appointed as Associate to the Honourable Justice Logan of the Federal Court of Australia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Laws from the University of Queensland; a Master of Laws (with First Class Honours) from the University of Melbourne; and a Master of War Studies from UNSW, specialising in counter-insurgency and cyber operations. He is currently enrolled concurrently in a Master of Military Law at the ANU, and a PhD at the University of Adelaide, looking at constitutional limitations and enablers for ADF counter interference operations.
Further reading:
- Samuel White, ‘Keeping the Peace of the iRealm’ (2021) 42(1) Adelaide Law Review 101
- Samuel White, Keeping the Peace of the Realm (2021: LexisNexis)
- Dale Stephens, 'Influence Operations and International Law' (2020) 19(4) Journal of Information Warfare 1.
- R v Secretary of State for the Home Department, ex parte Northumbria Police Authority [1987] EWCA Civ 5
- Shoshana Zuboff, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism (2018: Profile Books)
- Cameron Moore, Crown and Sword: Executive power and the use of force by the Australian Defence Force (2017: ANU Press)
90 Episoden
Manage episode 326189095 series 2811139
In this episode, Dr Simon McKenzie talks with Samuel White about how cyber operations and information warfare are changing national security and the role of the military. They explore how the domestic legal architecture might prevent or enable tasking the military with responding to cyber threats, and what it might mean for the contemporary relevance of the prerogative powers.
Samuel White has served as a Royal Australian Infantry Corps and Australian Army Legal Corps officer. In 2018, he was appointed as Associate to the Honourable Justice Logan of the Federal Court of Australia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Laws from the University of Queensland; a Master of Laws (with First Class Honours) from the University of Melbourne; and a Master of War Studies from UNSW, specialising in counter-insurgency and cyber operations. He is currently enrolled concurrently in a Master of Military Law at the ANU, and a PhD at the University of Adelaide, looking at constitutional limitations and enablers for ADF counter interference operations.
Further reading:
- Samuel White, ‘Keeping the Peace of the iRealm’ (2021) 42(1) Adelaide Law Review 101
- Samuel White, Keeping the Peace of the Realm (2021: LexisNexis)
- Dale Stephens, 'Influence Operations and International Law' (2020) 19(4) Journal of Information Warfare 1.
- R v Secretary of State for the Home Department, ex parte Northumbria Police Authority [1987] EWCA Civ 5
- Shoshana Zuboff, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism (2018: Profile Books)
- Cameron Moore, Crown and Sword: Executive power and the use of force by the Australian Defence Force (2017: ANU Press)
90 Episoden
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