Write a 5-page paper analyzing 2023’s National Cybersecurity Strategy Implementation Plan (NCSIP), which supports the NCS 2023, the Biden Administration’s approach to cybersecurity. Keep in mind that NIST recommends an approach to and best practices for cybersecurity. It is voluntary not a mandatory scheme. However, certain industries require the NIST approach. In addition, Congress has passed laws that mandate the NIST approach, especially for critical industries. A general outline is provided to provide a broad structure for the paper. You may use additional sections and add them to the paper. This is a lot of material, and the paper is brief. The idea is not to be overly comprehensive, but instead to convey that you understand and can clearly state what the NCS 2023 does, how it is expected to work, and to have you demonstrate your ability to analyze a policy and explain how it can be applied from a governance perspective.
Directions
In your paper, be sure to address each of the following prompts:
1. Explain your perspective on the NCSIP’s shift to partnering with and relying on the private sector. List 5 key elements of the plan and analyze them. Discuss whether you think this could be more or less successful than the federal government’s previous strategies, based on the elements in the plan and the articles written about it, that are in your resources. You will base your analysis on these, other resources you find and cite, and your experience if you are working in this field.
The 2023 National Cybersecurity Strategy (NCS) and its subsequent Implementation Plan (NCSIP) represent a significant and necessary evolution in the United States’ approach to cybersecurity. Departing from a largely government-centric and reactive model, the Biden Administration’s strategy pivots to a more collaborative, shared-responsibility framework that intentionally partners with and relies on the private sector. This paper will analyze this pivotal shift, examine five key elements of the NCSIP, and evaluate whether this new approach is poised for greater success than its predecessors.
The NCSIP’s core philosophy is a pragmatic recognition of modern cyber realities. The vast majority of critical infrastructure, sensitive data, and digital assets are owned and operated by the private sector. The federal government, no matter how well-resourced, cannot unilaterally secure this immense and diverse ecosystem. The new strategy acknowledges that the private sector is not merely a passive target to be protected but is, in fact, the front line of defense. My perspective is that this shift is not just a policy change; it is a fundamental and overdue realignment with the distribution of power and resources in the digital domain. Previous government-led strategies, which often treated cybersecurity as a top-down regulatory exercise, failed to effectively harness the innovation, scale, and speed of the private sector. The NCSIP attempts to correct this by creating a framework where the private sector is incentivized, and in some cases mandated, to take a more active role in national cyber defense. This collaborative model, while challenging to implement, represents a more realistic and sustainable path toward enhancing national cyber resilience.
The NCSIP outlines over 65 high-impact initiatives across five strategic pillars. An analysis of five key elements reveals the strategy’s multi-faceted and integrated approach to cybersecurity.