Willard Uncapher on Sat, 3 Nov 2001 15:46:01 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] NetHierarchies & NetWar / Re: <nettime> actually existingdemocracy digest |
At 05:27 AM 11/2/2001 -0500, the nettime finger-puppet dangled before us: "Paul Hilder" <paul.hilder@opendemocracy.net> RE: <nettime> myths, democracy, reactivism, network and hierarchy: >>we can argue till the cows come home about which is stronger or better, the network or the hierarchy, and the answer will never be accurate in the abstract or at the level of the global system - because at that level the abstract distinction is void of content. Yes, RAND, the CIA and the Pentagon are worried about netwar. They're worried about it because it has the capacity to tie them down, to diffuse their energies, to undermine them, and to be unbeatable (precisely because its "underground network" (rhizome for those of you who like that language) "spreads" faster than it can be destroyed ("the wasteland spreads"...). [...]>> Hierarchy is hot on the heels of the network, not because it is particularly swift, particularly evil, particularly powerful, or particularly resilient, but because it is part of the very structure of the Net itself. No amount of techno-romantic unity speech will eliminate hierarchy, yet the desire, even expectation that social communitarian reality is around the corner is always telling. Hierarchy looks at patterns of organization across levels, as a way to break problems down into patterns and sub-processes. These levels need not be set ahead of time, and one of the very under-researched, under-theorized aspects of the emerging Network Society is how these 'levels' have become more flexible. So what is the Net? Some might look to the net in terms of interdependent systems of communication. Some might look to the net in terms of leveraged position based on digitally enhanced surveillance and strategic intervention of force. I would argue that both are the case on the Net, and that we need to understand better must why these two species of discourse, that of the nearly attained unity of connection, and that of the nearly attained power of panoptic power suggest they are talking about the same thing, but can barely frame their conceptual frameworks to speak with each other. Elsewhere, I have argued that we need to develop a new network logic that deals the paradox of mutual exclusion of these points of view, between analog and digital, between process and category. No, hierarchy is not lost in the Net since the architectures of hierarchy, and the social formations they connect with in the case of computer networks, are bound with the very architecture of the computer itself. We find that networks are become strategic aspects of war and business. Consider the latest essay from Arquilla and Ronfeldt: http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue6_10/ronfeldt/index.html David Ronfeldt, and his associate John Arquila have been theorizing and planning for Netwar for over a decade, primarily in connection with official doctrines within the US military, primarily under the auspices of the quasi-military think tank associated with the RAND corp. This is not simply 'theoretical' work. Since they first proposed the concept during the early 1990s, netwar has become an explicit strategic topic taught in military colleges. Netwar has analogs to courses on 'virtual corporations' strategy taught in business schools. Netwar is different than 'cyberwar.' Netwar is about networks, whether using computer mediation or not. Cyberwar is about computer mediation and the kinds of tactics to use or disrupt computer mediation. Netwar is not about war 'in' networks, but rather using networks strategically, and in dealing with others who seek advantage by using networks. Including terrorists. This First Monday article summarizes some of the work associated with Arquilla and Ronfeldt. We might summarize the netwar credo: "it takes a network to fight a network." Post-9/11, we have heard this mantra- its origin lies with these papers. As this new military strategy of networks has evolved, it now includes notions of 'swarming' in which decentralized, mobile units discover advantages to their cause each on their own, and then quickly relay that information back to home base. Arquilla and Ronfeldt have authored a text, "Swarming and the Future of Conflict" available in pdf format from their RAND Corp. site. A key component is the use of decentralized, yet tightly communicating units or pods arranged into various layers or levels of strategic coordination. There is a lot of theoretical interest here for all of us interesting in complexity and management: How decentralized can the unit be, and yet still be coordinated by strategic higher levels. This is not so new- miltary and business strategists have long debated one another over the best places by which to relate different levels to activities within those levels. 'Hierarchies' are not static nor massively controlling- that is the point, whether we look to Pseudo-Dionysis (who came up with this religious term), or to the latest tactic of Information Management in your favorite business review. Simply to cast 'hierarchy' dialectically against democratic interdependence is to blind oneselve to what is going on in the world, to the kinds of strategies that have evolved, and to tactics of resistance and regulation that may need to be evolved by those who care. So now, what is a network? It is often useful to distinguish it from a 'system.' I have long argued in that unlike systems, a theoretical consideration of networks can include multiple levels, and the kinds of constraints and communication that can occur between levels. I would agree that many people use the terms network and system rather interchangeably. As one begins to theorize levels in networks, and this is something to which I have devoted a great deal of time and research. For one thing, levels need not be 'set' and fixed. That is, the 'place' of a level can dynamically change depending on a variety of factors. To understand this, we need to think about what we even mean by hierarchies, scope, and so on. What is a level- and this is a question particularly directed to those who have some trouble with the persistence of hierarchies in a network age. For those who don't want to even think about hierarchies, then they needn't consider related questions such as how is communication or control between levels possible, what is the origin of a level, why are they so difficult to think about, what is the history of these concepts, etc., since all these questions are subsumed under the derailing question of - how digital technologies are undermining 'hierarchies.' In short, I don't see hierarchies being eliminated, but rather our understanding of them, and their dynamics changing. There are a few hierarchy theorists around here so I need not go to far, other than to note that lower, quicker, shorter term, levels need not be 'nested' inside of higher, long term, slower moving levels, that is fully 'controlled' and limited by a higher level. The technoromantic image of unity, democracy, and responsibility via technology can consider the problems of richer countries getting richer, and richer people getting richer (on average) as mere aberrations along the probable path of an inevitable technological solution to our social ills. I doubt it, and think we had better become clearer about what the new dynamism has become, and how it effects our very language about identities, communities, and categories in networks. I would argue that we have to become actively engaged, as soon as possible, working with the notion of dynamic hiearchies (rather than the old fashion static version), understand that it is computers themselves that are endowing hierarchies with more flexibility, that we need to consider the importance of oversight, balance of power, and transpearancy in both the organizational forms that work in or with the public domain (broadly conceived to also include the natural environment), or in the private sector domain as we work for more efficient organizations that provide benefit to shareholders, workers, customers, and the public. In my own work, I have been using such insights to rethink what we mean by networks. If you work to ever to time with social network theorist, you would find that they tend to have a rather narrow two dimensional graphs of connections within systems. This is useful, but not exhaustive, and what is left out is various- power in networks, transformation of and in networks, and so on. There are some serious issues for those who worry about the power of governments here, for those engaged in critical studies. We might think of critical studies here in its concern with the nature, exercise, evaluation, and 'control' of power. Regulation is one such control of power. The definition of an audience or a problem is another such exercise of power. It is with such a definition that we assign responsibility, or evade it, that we connect events, or disconnect them. We need to look carefully at how the 'boundaries' of any network is defined. For example if we were to consider the 'Right Wing' Latin American Death Squads of the 1980s as 'terrorist' then what should we do about the people involved in training these people, particularly if they funded and organized nearly-covert training camps (such as the School of the Americas) or shadowy arms transfer programs. My point is that definitions matter because they determine the extent of responsibility by deliminating the edge of a network. What is the responsibility of citizens within these governments, or within Iraq for that matter. This is the kind of question that it takes courts to decide, but which have real consequences. Definitions have politics all their own- and a definition creates boundaries in a network. That's what a definition has always done. I will leave at that. We need to think about networks in a new way. It is a way that goes beyond simple systems and 2d-network theory with their descriptive bias to look at emerging network strategies. Not strategies in networks, but strategies using networks. I should emphasize that I both use and need traditional social network, actor-agent network, complex systems generation, but I believe that we should call upon ourselves to look at these questions in new ways. The same is true of hierarchies, particularly as either the research or the activities of a hierarchy become embedded and/or deconstructed within hierarchy and scale transforming technologies such as the lowly computer processor. The netwar example is relevant. Some might argue, "Yes, RAND, the CIA and the Pentagon are worried about netwar." Rather, netwar is becoming an explicit RAND/CIA/Pentagon strategy. So yes they can be worried about people who use netwar strategies against them, but so they would be worried about any one who sets themselves in opposition to their interests. But they aren't against the 'strategy' per se, since this is a 'doctrine' is one they would make their own. Let me note the chapter titles of Arquilla and Ronfeldt's article. Even by themselves, they offer some insights. They fill in the chapters one way. I might fill them in another way. How would you fill them in? 1. The Spread of Network Forms of Organization 2. When Is a Network Really an Organizational Network? 3. What Makes a Network Effective, Besides Organization? 4. The Practice of Netwar (and Counternetwar) 5. Coda: September's "Attack on America" Willard Willard Uncapher, Ph.D. / Network Emergence / 2369 Rodin Place, Davis, CA 95616 mailto:willard@well.com / http://well.com/user/willard _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold