IMSISS Teams Competing at Cyber 9/12 UK Strategy Challenge
The Cyber 9/12 UK Strategy Challenge, funded by the Atlantic Council, is designed to identify and foster the next generation of policy and strategy leaders for the cyber security challenges of the future.
Part interactive learning experience and part competitive scenario exercise, it challenges teams to respond to a realistic, evolving cyberattack, analyze the threats and risks and then propose effective mitigating policies and strategies to panels of expert judges. Over two days, the scenario evolves through 3 judging rounds into a grand final in front of a panel of senior cyber security leaders and all the other competitors.

Cyber 9/12 UK occurs on the 17th-18th February, and IMSISS has three teams competing this year: CS27001, LightCyber and Unanimous. All students competing in London are from our 2019-21 cohort. These teams were coached by University of Glasgow lecturer, Dr Damien van Puyvelde.
CS27001

Team CS27001 is composed of 2019-21 IMSISS students Ashley, Smera , Livia and Christie.
Cybersecurity
affects everyone. Since the dawn of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, a safe
and secure cyber domain has become a prerequisite for the preservation of
fundamental individual rights, such as privacy, and also a crucial element of
economic prosperity and political integrity. Owing to its paramount importance
in society, the digital world is increasingly being abused. The potential of
utilization of an arsenal of digital weapons to attack states, infrastructure,
institutions, and values has become a major threat to global security.
We, Ashley,
Smera, Christie, and Livia, want to actively contribute to a more prosperous
and secure world. We are confident that our existing knowledge, strengths, and
talents combined will be enhanced through real-time simulation exercises and
will help yield new inputs to the approach of cyber threats. Therefore, we are excited
to participate in the 2020 Cyber 9/12 Challenge in London.
Together, the
four of us possess a range of skills allowing us to deal efficaciously with the
broad spectrum of challenges in this domain. While sharing a passion for
security in general, and cybersecurity in particular, our diverse backgrounds,
both technical and non-technical, allow us to draw on strong professional and
academic competencies in political, economic, technological and communication
affairs.
Ashley
contributes strong business and technical analysis skills developed and refined
over nearly a decade of education and work experience in the field of
Information Technology. His former role as an IT business analyst and project
manager for one of the UK’s largest defense organisations, complemented by
previous military experience, provides a sound technical understanding of the
different aspects of implementing an international computer system from which
we can base our policy recommendations.
Having a
multi-disciplinary background in History, Politics, and Economics, Smera has
developed a sense of practical analysis through professional work. During her
employment at a leading think tank, she conducted research on various
geopolitical issues alongside prominent academicians and policymakers. This has
been further honed by participation in conferences and roundtable meetings such
as the Security 360 and the Policy Colloquium on Security organised by the
Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) of Indian Intelligence.
Christie further
accentuates the teams already heavily multidisciplinary professional and
academic background. Having past completed studies in psychology, criminology,
governance and public policy, she complements the team with her acquired
research skills and broad content knowledge to help with understanding cyber
crime at a behavioural and criminological level. She also has professional
history, working within a multinational tech company, with insights of how
these private enterprises face daily security adversaries, both physical and
technological. She provides well rounded professional skills, such as public
speaking, working in teams and competencies in working in high pressure
environments.
Livia
disposes of strong research skills, acquired through her degree combining
Political Science, Philosophy, and languages. As a former researcher in the
security field, she is accustomed to identifying reliable sources when
information is scarce, processing it analytically, and providing leaders with a
solid foundation for their decisions, even in moments of imminent crisis and
severe time pressure.
This
aggregation of individual skills and experiences, both academic and
professional in nature, allows this international team to stand out. The
multinational composition of the team can be instrumental in offering a
plethora of positions, allowing for an unrestricted approach to teamwork-based
solution-finding. Moreover, the guidance and knowledge of all the professors of
the IMSISS programme, honed under your leadership and direction, will provide
the team with all the tools necessary for a challenge of this magnitude.
Our
determination to develop a deeper understanding of security in order to fill
lacunae in the domain of cyber policy making will work as a catalyst for
change; not merely restricted to this exercise, but with possible application
in future national strategy documents. We feel privileged to represent and
promote IMSISS on the Cyber 9/12 Challenge and hopefully secure a world that is
prosperous for everyone.
LightCyber

Team LightCyber is composed of Emma van Heeswijk, Francis de Satge, Johanna Cottin, and Maarten Visser.
The members of Team LightCyber come from diverse academic and professional backgrounds. Francis is a South African alumnus of the University of Cape Town, with a background in Political Science and government policy, and Emma is an experienced qualitative researcher with a background in cultural anthropology and development sociology. Johanna is an award-winning filmmaker, with an academic background in Development Studies and Public Health concerns, and Maarten has many years of experience in the corporate world of tax law. The Team takes the challenge as a great opportunity to deepen their interest in Cyber Security and use their varying perspectives to address this expanding security threat.
Unanimous
Team Unanimous is composed of Gilles de Valk, Jessica Poon, Maria Patricia Bejarano Carbo and Zulaika Ubysheva.
Jessica Poon

Jessica has 5 years of experience working in research and business intelligence roles for tech SMEs. Her paper titled ‘The Art of Warring Networks: Critical Strategies of Self-Representation in the Post-Internet Condition’ was published in an anthology by isthisit? an artist collective from East London. She subsequently presented an accompanying lecture at King’s College London as part of their conference on Resisting Digital Culture. She graduated from the University of Cambridge in 2015.
Gilles de Valk

Gilles is from the Netherlands and holds a bachelor's degree in European Studies. During his BA, he focused on (geo)politics in Central and Eastern Europe and went on exchange to the Saint Petersburg State University. Beside his studies, he has been an intern at the Dutch Embassy in Kyiv (Ukraine) and at the Brussels based Netherlands house for Education and Research, which serves the interests of the Dutch education and research community at the EU.
Patricia Bejarano Carbo
Patricia holds a BA in Business Administration and BA in International Relations and is currently pursuing an IntM in Security, Intelligence and Strategic Studies. Her past professional experience in multinational corporations and organisations have influenced her research focus, which combines security issues with economic interests and their implications. She is also interested in issues of privacy and emerging cyber threats, such as deepfakes.
Zulaika Ubysheva

Zulaika Ubysheva has two years of experience in the non-profit sector, including international organizations, working with different social and development projects, and earned her Bachelor’s degree in Sociology and International Comparative Politics. Currently she is pursuing her Masters in Security, Intelligence and Strategic Studies with a concentration in conflict studies. Her enthusiasm for pursuing a career in conflict prevention and the peacebuilding area stems from her interest in working with youth and disadvantaged communities and her responsibility to make full use of her expertise and skills to help them acquire a better quality of life as every individual has a right to live in a safe, just, and peaceful environment. Her professional work within international organizations such as UNHCR and UNICEF, local NGOs and extensive community service at youth centers helped her to attain valuable field experience and acquire strong research, advocacy, communication, and project management skills.
More Information
For more information on the competition, follow Cyber 9/12 UK on Twitter and check out their website. IMSISS is committed to coaching and presenting teams to the competition each year (although participation is not guaranteed). There is no fee to compete in the competition, but IMSISS aims to help a select number of students participate in this competition each year. This year we also plan to submit teams to the Geneva competition.
Professor Kai Michael Kenkel (PUC-Rio & GIGA) visits IMSISS

In Autumn, IMSISS at Charles University received a visit by Professor Kai Michael Kenkel, a faculty member at the Institute of International Relations at the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and an associate of the GIGA Institute of Latin American Studies. There he taught our students and met with staff at Charles.
Following his trip to Prague, Prof. Kenkel recounted of his visit:
It was a great pleasure to be able to teach in the IMSISS programme at Charles University. The combination of a dynamic, international programme, housed in one of Europe’s oldest and most prestigious academic institutions, was very stimulating. Over the course of four sessions on two days during the space of almost a week, I taught the short course “Current Developments in Latin America”. On the first day, we discussed the political, economic and social specificities of the Latin American continent, with a focus on the legacies of colonialism, slavery and the Cold War. On the second, we engaged in an in-depth treatment of the current situation in Brazil, Chile and Bolivia, as examples of the impact of election results on political and economic stability. I was pleasantly surprised by both the level of interest in the class and students’ level knowledge and engagement in the class discussions. It was particularly interesting to be able to identify certain parallels between the past relationship of the Czech Republic and its Central European neighbours to Western European powers and that experienced by some South American states. My positive assessment of the my stay in the IMSISS programme at Charles University was reinforced further when I received students’ research papers some time after the end of the teaching; most were very well structured, and as a whole they showed an impressive breadth of topics and theories, from constructivism to Realism and from water rights in Chile, the role of China in the Brazilian economy, and decolonial approaches to the current crisis in Bolivia. In terms of contributions to my own teaching and other responsibilities, it was thrilling to see the breadth of work being done on up-to-date security questions in the University, and I was able to initiate a formal institutional cooperation process with my own Institute and University. The teaching topic contributed to my own efforts in that it added another welcome layer of insights to the richness of interpretations that must be brought to bear in teaching about a region as diverse as Latin America.
PUC-Rio is an Associate Partner of IMSISS, and helps us to deliver on our ambition to be a global collective of conversations on security. We look forward to future collaboration with Prof Kenkel and his colleagues.