Four crucial signals can inform us about whether America’s authoritarian descent is real.
Steven Feldstein is a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in the Democracy, Conflict, and Governance Program. His research focuses on technology and politics, U.S. foreign policy, and the global context for democracy and human rights.
Feldstein is the author of The Rise of Digital Repression: How Technology is Reshaping Power, Politics, and Resistance (2021), which is the recipient of the 2023 Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order. He is currently writing a book about how technology is impacting global competition and war, under contract with St. Martin’s Press.
He has published research on digital technology’s impact on war, the role of artificial intelligence is reshaping repression, the geopolitics of technology, China’s advancing digital authoritarianism, and new patterns of internet shutdowns. He released a global AI surveillance index to track the proliferation of advanced digital tools and published a global inventory of commercial spyware and digital forensics.
Previously, he was the holder of the Frank and Bethine Church Chair of Public Affairs and an associate professor at Boise State University. He has served in multiple foreign policy positions in the U.S. government. He was a deputy assistant secretary in the democracy, human rights, and labor bureau in the U.S. Department of State under President Obama. Prior to that role, he served as the director of policy at the U.S. Agency for International Development, and also worked as counsel on the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations under Chairmen Joseph Biden and John Kerry.
He has authored numerous essays, articles, book chapters, policy reports, and commentary in major media outlets and policy journals. He is a graduate of Princeton University and Berkeley Law. He was born and raised in Bloomington, Indiana. His full CV can be found here.
Four crucial signals can inform us about whether America’s authoritarian descent is real.
Today’s tech titans will do everything in their power to maintain their supremacy. But constraints from Europe and U.S. regulators, coercive pressure from China, Russia, and India, and the long arc of innovation belie an uncertain future.
An explanation on why the space agency leaned on SpaceX to help bring them back home by next February.
Its ambitions shouldn’t come as a surprise, but the geopolitical implications are worrying.
The arrest of Telegram founder and CEO Pavel Durov is controversial because it poses a threat to the free flow of information.
Encryption and other security features have allowed those in countries with restrictions on free speech to communicate on the platform without fear of being exposed.
Three factors are helping to sustain Moscow’s military technology procurement efforts.
Liberal democracies can play a much greater role in setting norms and baseline conditions for the deployment of these powerful new technologies of war.
Military use of drones is surging globally. This paper argues that regional powers, particularly Iran, Israel, and Türkiye, are driving the proliferation of military drone exports due to cost efficiencies, improved capabilities, and minimal export restrictions.
In their new pieces, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace's Digital Democracy Network experts consider the growing role of technology in politics and society with insight and analysis aimed at bridging the gap between local perspectives and global conversations.