@incollection{discovery10062727,
           title = {Cybersecurity: Policy},
       publisher = {Springer Nature},
            note = {This version is the author accepted manuscript. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher's terms and conditions.},
       booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Security and Emergency Management},
         address = {Cham, Switzerland},
            year = {2018},
          editor = {LR Shapiro and M-H Maras},
        abstract = {Cybersecurity policy refers to a course of action adopted by a state, an organization, or a set of actors with the aim of ensuring cybersecurity and/or digital competitiveness as well as defining the individual and collective responsibilities in pursuit of that goal.},
             url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-69891-5\%5f20-1},
          author = {Chung, AS and Dawda, S and Hussain, A and Shaikh, SA and Carr, M},
        keywords = {Adaptive policymaking (APM); agile governance; attribution; Budapest Convention; critical
infrastructure; cyber; cyberattack; cybercrime; cybersecurity; European Union (EU);
evidence-based policymaking; geopolitics; incident response; international relations; Mutual
Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT); UK National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC); national cyber
security strategy (NCSS); US National Cyber Strategy (NCS); US National Security Strategy
(NSS); polycentric governance; public policy; public-private partnership; socio-technical;
Tallinn Manual; United Kingdom (UK); United Nations (UN); United States (US); wicked
problem}
}