Author
Listed:
- Costel Marian Dalban
(Department of Social Sciences and Communication, Transilvania University of Brașov, 500036 Brașov, Romania
Department of Sociology, Social Work and Human Resources, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University, 700506 Iași, Romania)
- Ecaterina Coman
(Department of Management and Economic Informatics, Transilvania University of Brașov, 500036 Brașov, Romania)
- Vlad Bătrânu-Pințea
(Department of Social Sciences and Communication, Transilvania University of Brașov, 500036 Brașov, Romania)
- Mihail Anton
(Department of Information Systems and Cyber Actions, Carol I National Defence University, 050662 Bucharest, Romania)
- Iulia Para
(Department of Marketing and International Business Relations, West University Timisoara, 300223 Timișoara, Romania)
- Luminița Ioana Mazuru
(Department of Economic Disciplines, Aurel Vlaicu University, 310130 Arad, Romania)
Abstract
This study maps European countries’ resilience to cognitive warfare by developing a cross-national composite measure. The framework integrates three pillars: information ecology, institutional-digital capacity, and socioeconomic context—drawing on a systemic perspective linking social structures to societal functions. Publicly available secondary indicators are compiled from online sources for EU (European Union) and EEA (European Economics Area) states. The dataset is examined through descriptive analysis, association testing, multivariate modelling, dimensionality reduction to derive a composite resilience score, and unsupervised clustering to produce a country typology. Indicators capture governance effectiveness, e-government maturity, public-sector AI (Artificial Intelligence) readiness, digital connectivity and infrastructure, media freedom and broader media-ecosystem quality, academic freedom, and socioeconomic vulnerabilities such as youth labour market exclusion. Results show that resilience aligns most strongly with institutional capacity and governance performance; a healthy ecology acts as a reinforcing layer. Digital infrastructure appears necessary but insufficient without capable, credible institutions and coherent public policy. Socioeconomic vulnerabilities tend to erode resilience and heighten susceptibility to hostile cognitive influence. The study concludes that policy efforts should prioritise governance integrity and effectiveness, end-to-end digital government, responsible public-sector AI capability, and safeguards for media and academic autonomy, alongside measures that improve youth inclusion.
Suggested Citation
Costel Marian Dalban & Ecaterina Coman & Vlad Bătrânu-Pințea & Mihail Anton & Iulia Para & Luminița Ioana Mazuru, 2026.
"Mapping European Countries’ Resilience to Cognitive Warfare,"
Administrative Sciences, MDPI, vol. 16(3), pages 1-21, March.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jadmsc:v:16:y:2026:i:3:p:160-:d:1900951
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