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Cyber Policy

To achieve greater stability and civility in cyberspace, Carnegie’s Technology and International Affairs program develops strategies and policies in several key areas and promotes international cooperation and norms by engaging key decisionmakers in governments and industry.

About the Technology and International Affairs Program

The Carnegie Technology and International Affairs Program develops strategies to maximize the positive potential of emerging technologies while reducing risk of large-scale misuse or harm. With Carnegie’s global centers and an office in Silicon Valley, the program collaborates with technologists, corporate leaders, government officials, and scholars globally to understand and prepare for the implications of advances in cyberspace, biotechnology, and artificial intelligence.

  • Jon Bateman

    Senior Fellow
    Technology and International Affairs Program

    Jon Bateman is a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, where he focuses on global technology challenges at the intersection of national security, economics, politics, and society.

  • Nick Beecroft

    Nonresident Scholar
    Technology and International Affairs Program

    Nick Beecroft is a nonresident scholar in the Technology and International Affairs Program at the Carnegie Endowment.

  • Chris Finan

    Nonresident Scholar
    Technology and International Affairs Program

    Chris Finan is a nonresident scholar in the Technology and International Affairs Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

  • Robert Greene

    Nonresident Scholar
    Asia Program and Technology and International Affairs Program

    Robert Greene is a nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace’s Technology and International Affairs Program and Asia Program, focusing on Chinese financial sector trends and on topics at the nexus of cyberspace governance, global finance, and national security.

  • Duncan B. Hollis

    Nonresident Scholar
    Technology and International Affairs Program

    Duncan B. Hollis is a nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the James E. Beasley professor of law at Temple Law School, where he also serves as the associate dean for academic affairs.

  • Ariel (Eli) Levite

    Nonresident Senior Fellow
    Nuclear Policy Program
    Technology and International Affairs Program

    Levite was the principal deputy director general for policy at the Israeli Atomic Energy Commission from 2002 to 2007.

  • Cheri McGuire

    Nonresident Scholar
    Technology and International Affairs Program

    Cheri McGuire is chief technology officer at SWIFT and a nonresident scholar with Carnegie’s Technology and International Affairs Program.

  • Arthur Nelson

    Deputy Director
    Technology and International Affairs Program

    Arthur Nelson is deputy director of Carnegie’s Technology and International Affairs Program.

  • George Perkovich

    Japan Chair for a World Without Nuclear Weapons
    Vice President for Studies

    Perkovich works primarily on nuclear strategy and nonproliferation issues; cyberconflict; and new approaches to international public-private management of strategic technologies.

  • Nanjira Sambuli

    Fellow
    Technology and International Affairs

    Nanjira Sambuli is a fellow in the Technology and International Affairs Program.

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