Denmark’s TechPlomacy initiative aims at addressing three interlinked trends in foreign policy today:
First, some of today’s most far-reaching societal changes are driven in part or full by technological disruption in different forms and shapes: The impact of artificial intelligence and automation on the future of jobs; big data on the protection of personal information; social media on democratic dialogue and elections; Internet of Things on cyber security; digital business models on taxation systems; and crypto-currency on global financial architecture. These trends – sometimes grouped together as the ‘Fourth Industrial Revolution’ - are international per design, transcending borders with an unprecedented speed, transforming almost all sectors of society, and impacting not only domestic markets but the global balance of power and established values and institutions.
Second, the multinational tech companies driving this technological innovation have become extremely influential; to the extent that their economic and political power match - or even surpass - that of our traditional partners, the nation states. At the same time, it is becoming increasingly difficult for policy-makers at all levels to keep up with the pace and impact of new technologies
Third, the transformative nature of emerging technologies combined with the rise of powerful non-state actors are shaping foreign policy and geopolitics in new ways. As an example, Artificial Intelligence is rapidly becoming a battlefield in a shifting global balance of power, cyber security have risen to top of the national security agenda, and 5G networks have become a contested issue internationally. As the Center for Long Term Cyber Security at UC Berkeley points out: ‘Digital geopolitics is no longer a layer superimposed on conventional geopolitics; digital is creating new alignments among new actors, and not only states.’
For a government to rely solely on traditional diplomatic relations to bring home knowledge, promote its interest and safeguard values abroad, no longer seems sufficient. The TechPlomacy initiative was launched by the Danish government in 2017. The purpose of the initiative was first elaborated in the Government’s Foreign and Security Policy Strategy 2017-18. The mandate cut across foreign and security policy, including cyber, development policy, export and investment promotion, and a range of sector policies – as well across Denmark’s bilateral relations with other countries and in the EU and multilateral fora.