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Johnson, J. (2021). The end of military-techno pax americana? washington’s strategic responses to chinese ai-enabled military technology. The Pacific Review, 34(3), 351–378. 
Resource type: Journal Article
BibTeX citation key: Johnson2021
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Categories: Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive Science, Complexity Science, Computer Science, Data Sciences, Decision Theory, General, Geopolitical, Military Science
Subcategories: 5G, Autonomous systems, Big data, Chaos theory, China, Command and control, Cross-domain deterrence, Decision making, Doctrine, Edge AI, JADC2, Machine learning, Mosaic warfare, Networked forces, Psychology of human-AI interaction, United States
Creators: Johnson
Publisher:
Collection: The Pacific Review
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Abstract
This article uses the international relations (IR) ‘polarity’ concept as a lens to view the shifting great power dynamics in artificial intelligence (AI) and related enabling technologies. The article describes how and why great power competition is mounting in within several interrelated dual-use technological fields; why these innovations are considered by Washington to be strategically vital, and how (and to what end) the United States is responding to the perceived challenge posed by China to its technological hegemony. The following questions addressed in this paper fill a gap in the existing literature: Will the increasingly competitive U.S.-China relationship dominate world politics creating a new bipolar world order, as opposed to a multipolar one? Why does the U.S. view China’s progress in dual-use AI as a threat to its first-mover advantage? How might the U.S. respond to this perceived threat?
  
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