Carnegie Mellon University
Carnegie Mellon Institute for Strategy & Technology

CMU's Home for Political Science and International Relations

CMIST logo

CMU's home for Political Science and International Relations, CMIST is an interdisciplinary institute that works across Carnegie Mellon University to tackle the risks and benefits of emerging technologies in war and peace.

The Carnegie Mellon Institute for Strategy & Technology, or "CMIST," is a university-wide initiative dedicated to the wise development, use and governance of new and emerging technologies that are changing war and peace.  The home for Carnegie Mellon University’s study of Political Science and International Relations, CMIST is uniquely poised to take advantage of the university’s strengths in computer science and engineering, and its distinctive tradition of cross-university, cross-disciplinary research.  Focused on questions of power and governance, CMIST builds new frameworks for managing global and national security challenges.
2025 Diploma Ceremony
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2025 Diploma Ceremony
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US Army War College Visit
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Scientists & Strategists - Beyond the Cloud: The Rise of Edge Computing
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Scientists & Strategists - Cyber Flashpoints in Space with Laura DeNardis
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CMIST's Politics & Pie Spring 2025
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Prof. Daniel Silverman Book Launch - Seeing is Disbelieving
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Lawfully Speaking - The Revolution in Military Affairs, Law, and the Future of Warfare
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Scientists & Strategists - Civil-Military Relations: Throughout History and in Modern Times with Kori Schake
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Scientists & Strategists - How Tech Firms Shape Geopolitics with Adam Segal
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Scientists & Strategists - Influence Without Arms: The New Logic of Nuclear Deterrence with Adam Fuhrmann
Scientists & Strategists - Influence Without Arms: The New Logic of Nuclear Deterrence with Adam Fuhrmann
CMIST White Paper Launch Event with Harry Krejsa
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CMIST Digital Diplomacy Event
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At CMIST we address the challenges of new and emerging technologies through a political science lens.

New Publication

Carnegie Mellon researchers Harry Krejsa of CMIST and Dr. Thomas Şerban von Davier of SEI have released their latest white paper, Agents of Change: Rapid Shifts in AI Economics Are Redefining How Agentic Systems Are Built, Powered, and Deployed. Exploring the emergence of AI agents and the economic shifts driving cheaper model development across the tech industry, this paper also uncovers the intricate dynamic between AI, energy, and China, suggesting it's more complex than headlines imply. To avoid past internet pitfalls, the industry is already championing open-source and interoperable frameworks for the burgeoning agent economy, though government support is essential for their effective implementation, broad acceptance, and sustained research.

 

View White Paper   

 

Recent Work

Perry World House

The Future of Nuclear Deterrence in the Indo-Pacific

The Future of Nuclear Deterrence in the Indo-Pacific

By Patrick M. Cronin

Responsible Statecraft

The Hidden Costs of Trump's 'Madman' Approach to Tariffs

The Hidden Costs of Trump's 'Madman' Approach to Tariffs

By Joshua Schwartz

The Loop

Is Iran’s Sharp Power Waning?

Is Iran’s Sharp Power Waning?

By John Chin and Mary Urso

Lawfare

Ready for Launch: A Space Cybersecurity Road Map for Trump 2.0

Ready for Launch: A Space Cybersecurity Road Map for Trump 2.0

By Lauryn Williams

RealClearEnergy

AI Power Demand Is Remaking Our Energy Ecosystem – While Painting a Target on Its Back

AI Power Demand Is Remaking Our Energy Ecosystem – While Painting a Target on Its Back

By Harry Krejsa and Mark Montgomery

Lawfare

How Drones Make Civil Wars Worse

How Drones Make Civil Wars Worse


By Joshua Schwartz, John Chin, and Haleigh Bartos

Team of Teams

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 The views and opinions expressed in CMIST publications are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily reflect any official position of CMIST or Carnegie Mellon University.