01131nas a2200121 4500000000100000008004100001260001500042100002200057245008200079856018000161520065400341022001400995 2018 d c2018-05-041 aErin D. Dumbacher00aLimiting cyberwarfare: applying arms-control models to an emerging technology uhttps://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10736700.2018.1515152?casa_token=sbjQubeGMEkAAAAA%3AZ9jXqV16qR1STHJpsko4bXl4wwzGPZsWRX1SVOKadcKwuCGVKnLADH3U3dIqPrjy9SsTCFKGdsXlNQ3 aAn arms race in cyberspace is underway. US and Western government efforts to control this process have largely been limited to deterrence and norm development. This article examines an alternative policy option: arms control. To gauge whether arms-control models offer useful lessons for addressing cyber capabilities, this article compiles a new dataset of predominantly twentieth-century arms-control agreements. It also evaluates two case studies of negotiated agreements that regulate dual-use technologies, the 1928 Geneva Protocol prohibiting chemical- and biological-weapon use and the 1944 Chicago Convention on International Civil Aviation. a1073-6700