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This book examines the rapid shift from analog to digital life, accelerated by the pandemic, and its profound impact on diplomacy. As technology has advanced, new actors—especially Big Tech companies—now wield significant influence over international relations, global governance, and the world order, sometimes surpassing the power of governments.The book addresses the challenges of diplomacy in the digital age from various perspectives, incorporating insights from diverse actors and disciplines, including universities, the private sector, and Science, Technology, and Innovation (STI) diplomacy. It also examines how different state approaches to digital governance impact the long-term resilience of their democracies.This publication is a collaborative effort between university scholars and international experts, developed within the research group "EU Diplomacy Future 4 Digital Age,” led by the Institute of European Studies and Human Rights at the Pontifical University of Salamanca.
Mario Torres Jarrín is the Director of the Institute of European Studies and Human Rights at the Pontifical University of Salamanca (Spain). He was a Researcher and Associate Lecturer at Friedrich Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg in Germany and Stockholm University and Director at the European Institute of International Studies in Sweden.
CHAPTER 1. DIPLOMACY IN THE DIGITAL AGE: INTRODUCTION, REFLECTIONS AND A GENERAL OVERVIEW Mario Torres Jarrín and Antonio Nuñez y García-Saúco CHAPTER 2. AI & INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: BUILDING A PRACTICAL GUIDE FOR ETHICS GOVERNANCE OF AI FOR DIPLOMACY Cecilia Celeste Danesi CHAPTER 3. SCIENCE DIPLOMACY AND INNOVATION DIPLOMACY: EUROPEAN TRAJECTORIES IN INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES (A LONG-TERM PERSPECTIVE)Pascal Griset CHAPTER 4. ENTREPRENEURIAL UNIVERSITIES AND SCIENCE DIPLOMACY: HARNESSING BENEFITS AT MICRO, MESO, AND MACRO LEVELS IN SWEDEN'S ACADEMIC LANDSCAPEMagnus Lindqvist and Hans Lundin CHAPTER 5. THE PROTECTION OF FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS IN INTERNATIONAL DATA TRANSFERS FROM THE SCHREMS II CASEAline Beltrame de Moura and Gabriel Henrique Ceron Trevisol CHAPTER 6. DILEMMAS AND TRADEOFFS IN DIGITAL GOVERNANCE: COMPARING THE UNITED STATES, CHINA AND THE EUROPEAN UNIONKayle van t’Klooster and Madeleine O. Hosli CHAPTER 7. THE ALGORITHMIC LIFE SEEN FROM THE AMERICAS: AN OPPORTUNITY TO DEPLOY EU DIPLOMACY WITH A SOCIAL IMPACTPaulina Astroza and Matthias Erlandsen CHAPTER 8. TRANSNATIONAL SKILLS EXCHANGES AS A MODEL FOR SCIENCE DIPLOMACY: EUROPEAN AID AND RECONSTRUCTION IN PALESTINEJonathan Michael Feldman CHAPTER 9. PARLIAMENTARY DIPLOMACY AND PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION IN THE DIGITAL AGE: AN UNEXPLORED OPPORTUNITY FOR UPHOLDING HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE EUROPEAN UNION AND BEYOND? Mónica Velasco-Pufleau