CIM Events
Upcoming Events
Past events
CIM Research Demi-away-day
“Accelerate or Die”, Film screening and post-show chat
The Beat Godfather and the Glitter Mainman: Appreciating Bowie through Burroughs
Digital Divides and Health: Exploring the impact of digitalization on health in local, national, and international contexts
Research Forum 2: Post-colonial Spaces, Infrastructures and Digital Health Regulation
Models in/of Security: Models as artefacts and practice in cyber security
9.45 Arrival/coffee
Radcliffe Conference Centre – Space 17
10.00 – 10.15 Welcome
10.15 – 10.45 Opening
Matt Spencer (University of Warwick) “Models in/of security”
10.45 – 11.00 Coffee
11.00 – 12.30 Panel 1
Chaired by Cagatay Turkay (University of Warwick)
Ksenia Ermoshina (Centres de Internet et Societe, CNRS, Paris)
“Beyond digital: threat-modelling, plurality and relativism in informational security trainings”
Peter Hall (University of the Arts, London) and Luke Demarest (University of the Arts London)
“Critical visualization and critical modelling”
Daniele Pizio (University of Warwick)
“The De-Perimeterisation of Information Security: The Jericho Forum, Zero Trust, and Narrativity”
12.30 – 13.30 Lunch
13.30 – 15.45 Spatialities of Securities
Physical modelling session facilitated by Lizzie Coles-Kemp, Matt Spencer, Daniele Pizio
In this session, participants will take part in a hands-on physical modelling task, with the goal of using this process to examine the spatialities of security. Having built a model based on a provocation provided, participants will examine how security architectures use spatial relations for their construction, how models and modelling draw upon spatial relations in order to support reasoning, and in general the relations between spatiality and how we make sense of security problems.
15.45 – 16.00 Coffee
16.00 – 17.30 Panel 2
Chaired by Peter Hall (University of the Arts, London)
Cagatay Turkay (University of Warwick)
“Exploring a critical thinking culture for data-driven modelling” Claude Heath (Royal Holloway)
“Hand-waving and abstraction in security: the inscription of everyday security understandings”
Andrew Dwyer (Royal Holloway)
“Modelling Terrain: The Tension(s) of Material Data in Adversarial CyberOperations”
17.30 – 18.00 Closing Comments
Lizzie Coles-Kemp (Royal Holloway)
19.00 Dinner