CYSE 201S

Cybersecurity and the Social Sciences

This course addresses the social, political, legal, criminological, and economic dimensions of cybersecurity through a social science framework. Students are introduced to a human-factors approach to understanding cybersecurity threats. Attention is given to the social factors that contribute to cyber incidents and the political and legal mechanisms that are developed to control the behaviors of those who create risks and cybersecurity incidents. The class also explores how cybersecurity is studied by social scientists in various social science disciplines. The learning outcomes for this course are as follows:

  1. Compare how basic psychological, sociological, criminological, political, economic, and
    legal theories and models explain cybersecurity
  2. Identify the strengths and weaknesses of those theories in understanding the connections
    between human behaviors and cybersecurity
  3. Define key concepts including cybersecurity, cybercrime, cyber criminology, cyber law,
    digital forensics, human factors, cyber policy, cyber risk, cyber threats, and cyberwar.
  4. Identify how professionals in various cybersecurity careers apply these multidisciplinary
    concepts in their daily routines
  5. Describe how hypotheses and research questions are formed in studies addressing
    cybersecurity through a social science lens
  6. Describe how data are collected, measured, and analyzed in studies addressing
    cybersecurity through a social science lens
  7. Identify how marginalized groups have confronted challenges and concerns related to
    cybersecurity as well as how these groups have contributed to our understanding about
    the topic.
  8. Explain how the application of social science theories, principles, and research strategies
    have contributed to our understanding of cybersecurity at the societal level.

Course Material