Research output per year
Research output per year
TW20 0EX
Andrew is an experienced researcher at the intersection of socio-technical and geopolitical interests in (cyber) security. His research ranges from work within cyber policy and geopolitics, an in-depth knowledge of malware detection, the role of machine learning in international security, to participatory and creative practice. He has spoken to numerous media outlets including The Telegraph, VOA Chinese, and BBC News as well as BBC Radio 4, BBC World Service, and LBC.
Outside of Royal Holloway, he is the Lead of the UK Offensive Cyber Working Group, drawing together academia on questions of UK and international cyber policy. He is also on the editorial board of Digital Geography and Society. Previously, Andrew has been a Research Affiliate at the (former) Centre for Technology and Global Affairs at the University of Oxford and an Assistant Editor at the journal Big Data & Society.
He has also been an Addison Wheeler Research Fellow at Durham University (2020 - 2022), a Research Associate at the University of Bristol's Cyber Security Group (2019 - 2020) and a Visiting Fellow at the SFB-TRR 138 'Dynamics of Security' collaborative research centre in central Germany in 2019.
I am open to applicants from PhD students who have an interest in the socio-technical, ethico-political, and geopolitical dimensions of computation and security. Please do get in touch if you have an idea, with a short summary of that idea along with a current CV.
Current PhD Students
MSc Information Security
This explores how different groups of people – ranging from practitioners, researchers, and policy-makers – understand the role of decision with regards to the use of machine learning techniques (often summarised as ‘artificial intelligence’) within cyber security. This takes the role of 'terrain' to examine how decisions become hybrid along with computational forms of recursivity. This draws on research continuing from Andrew's PhD on 'Malware Ecologies.'
This examines how cyber policy and regulation are transforming over time as cyber security becomes embedded within everyday life. This is especially so as it expands and incorporates private and public actors, as well as facing internationally through both offensive and defensive state cyber operations.
This research strand challenges dominant and normative assumptions of what it means to be secure. That is, what may we be missing, and crucially, how may we develop new ways of thinking and doing that addresses those who are marginalised, including those from the global majority, and who may be embedded with, and exposed to, greater forms of differentiated forms of power and vulnerability.
In 2015, UN member states agreed to 17 global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all. This person’s work contributes towards the following SDG(s):
Cyber Security, DPhil, Malware Ecologies: A Politics of Cybersecurity, School of Geography and Environment, University of Oxford
Award Date: 15 Nov 2019
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter (peer-reviewed) › peer-review
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper › peer-review
Dwyer, A. (PI)
Department for Science, Innovation & Technology
4/11/24 → 28/02/25
Project: Research