UQx: Global Media, War, and Technology
Explore the intersection of information technology, violent conflict, and resistance.

- Certification
- Certificate of completion
- Duration
- 7 weeks
- Price Value
- $ 189
- Difficulty Level
- Introductory
Explore the intersection of information technology, violent conflict, and resistance.
An eye-opening course exploring the intersection of modern warfare, media, and technology in our increasingly interconnected world.
This course delves into how the experience of war has fundamentally changed, not only for those directly involved in conflicts but also for those observing from afar. You'll discover how high-tech nations wage wars using advanced weaponry, while non-state actors and citizen journalists add new dimensions to the narrative of conflict.
Explore the impact of smartphones, internet access, and social media on our perception and understanding of war. Learn about the complexities of cyberspace, including cyber espionage, internet censorship, and surveillance, and how these factors are reshaping the landscape of global conflict.
Explore more courses to enhance your cloud computing and Kubernetes skills.
This course explores freedom of expression, access to information, and online freedoms in Africa, considering disinformation and issues with Internet companies’ models. It addresses AI's impact on media and journalism, examining colonial legacies and neo-colonial control of communications for political repression, and civil society's role in achieving change.
The course delves into transforming inhibiting policies and practices, enabling better communication freedoms through appropriate laws.
This course examines the lasting impact of colonial and neo-colonial communication control for political repression, with a focus on civil society's role in effecting change via national and international policy and law mechanisms. We delve into policy issues of Access to Information (and data) in Africa, the economic viability of the news media and the strategic aspects of organising campaigns.
Former Secretary of Defense William J. Perry and a team of international experts explore what can be done about the threat of nuclear terrorism in this free course, for which you can earn a signed Statement of Accomplishment. This is a self-paced version of the original course which ran in Fall 2017.
Welcome to "The Threat of Nuclear Terrorism"
"Today, the danger of some sort of nuclear catastrophe is greater than it was during the Cold War, and most people are blissfully unaware of this danger."
I wrote these words three years ago, and my concern led me to create my first Stanford Online course, "Living at the Nuclear Brink." Our nuclear peril continues to increase, and therefore I offer the next in our series of free courses on this vital subject: The Threat of Nuclear Terrorism. The topic is frightening, but it is one we must face if we are to have any chance of stopping potential catastrophe.
With rapid globalization and proliferation of social media, businesses and organizations are in face of enormous communication challenges. By seeing challenge as opportunity, this course aims to unfold communication challenges induced by the rise of social media and offer solutions to overcome these challenges.