Title :
Social Modeling and Simulation for National Security
Author :
Resnyansky, Lucy
Author_Institution :
Command, Control, Comm, & Intell. Div., Defence Sci. & Technol. Organ., Edinburgh, SA, Australia
Abstract :
Ethical challenges emerge from the use of social modeling and simulation (M&S) for national security (NS) analysis. These challenges differ from those created in surveillance and data gathering technologies. In surveillance and data gathering, the primary concern is the physical or moral harm to citizens, and solutions are sought through legal regulation. In the case of modeling and simulation, the ethical issues may be less obvious. They relate to the use of knowledge in collaborative research activity and to the quality of analysis and decision-making within an organization. In order to respond to ethical challenges emerging due to the use of social M&S within the national security area, an M&S tool needs to be conceptualized not as an ethically neutral piece of technology, or as a product and/or service for which the vendor is legally responsible. Rather, the M&S tool is a locus of the intersection of different professional, organizational, and epistemological cultures.
Keywords :
decision making; ethical aspects; military computing; national security; public administration; security of data; surveillance; collaborative research activity; data gathering technologies; decision making; epistemological culture; ethical challenges; legal regulation; national security analysis; organizational culture; professional culture; social modeling; social simulation; surveillance technologies; Analytical models; Computational modeling; Cultural differences; Decision making; Ethics; Human factors; Modeling; National security; Social factors;
Journal_Title :
Technology and Society Magazine, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/MTS.2012.2184954