000 06487nam a2200241 i 4500
003 MIUC
005 20200127113822.0
008 170221s2012 enka f 001 | eng
020 _a9780199929474
040 _aMIUC
_beng
_cMIUC
082 0 _a327.12
245 0 4 _aThe Oxford handbook of national security intelligence /
_cedited by Loch K. Johnson.
260 _aOxford ;
_aNew York :
_bOxford University Press,
_c2012.
300 _axv, 886 p. :
_bill. b&w ;
_c25 cm.
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 0 _gPt. 1.
_tIntroduction --
_gCh. 1.
_tNational Security Intelligence /
_rLoch K. Johnson --
_gCh. 2.
_tNational Security and Public Anxiety: Our Changing Perceptions /
_rSir Richard Dearlove --
_gPt. 2.
_tTheory and method --
_gCh. 3.
_tTheories of Intelligence /
_rPeter Gill --
_gCh. 4
_tThe Sources and Methods of Intelligence Studies /
_rJames J. Wirtz --
_gCh. 5.
_tGetting Intelligence History Right: Reflections and Recommendations from the Inside /
_rNicholas Dujmovic --
_gCh. 6.
_tAssessing Intelligence Performance /
_rJohn Gentry --
_gPt. 3.
_tThe evolution of modern intelligence --
_gCh. 7.
_tThe Rise of the U.S. Intelligence System, 1917-1977 /
_rMichael Warner --
_gCh. 8.
_tThe Rise and Fall of the CIA /
_rRhodri Jeffreys-Jones --
_gCh. 9.
_tBritish Strategic Intelligence and the Cold War /
_rLen Scott --
_gCh. 10.
_tSignals Intelligence in War and Power Politics, 1914-2008 /
_rJohn Ferris --
_gCh. 11.
_tThe President's Intelligence Advisory Board /
_rMichael Absher, Michael Desch, and Roman Popadiuk --
_gCh. 12.
_tIntelligence and Law Enforcement /
_rFred F. Manget --
_gCh. 13.
_tEvolution of International Collaboration in the Global Intelligence Era /
_rA. Denis Clift --
_gPt. 4.
_tIntelligence collection and processing --
_gCh. 14.
_tThe Dilemma of Open Source Intelligence: Is OSINT Really Intelligence? /
_rArthur S. Hulnick --
_gCh. 15.
_tThe Troubled Inheritance: The National Security Agency and the Obama Administration /
_rMatthew M. Aid --
_gCh. 16.
_tThe Human Collection of Intelligence /
_rFrederick P. Hitz --
_gCh. 17.
_tUnited Nations Peacekeeping Intelligence /
_rA. Walter Dorn --
_gCh. 18.
_tPrivatized Spying: The Emerging Intelligence Industry /
_rPatrick R. Keefe --
_gCh. 19.
_tGuarding the Border: Intelligence and Law Enforcement in Canada's Immigration System /
_rArne Kislenko --
_gCh. 20.
_tExtraordinary Rendition /
_rWilliam G. Weaver & Robert M. Pallitto --
_gPt. 5.
_tIntelligence analysis and production --
_gCh. 21.
_tAddressing "Complexities " in Homeland Security /
_rGregory F. Treverton --
_gCh. 22.
_tThe Intelligence Analysis Crisis /
_rUri Bar-Joseph and Rose McDermott --
_gCh. 23.
_tCompetitive Analysis: Techniques for Better Gauging Enemy Political Intentions and Military Capabilities /
_rRichard L. Russell --
_gCh. 24.
_tDecision Advantage and the Nature of Intelligence Analysis /
_rJennifer Sims --
_gCh. 25.
_tIntelligence Analysis in an Uncertain Environment /
_rWilliam M. Nolte --
_gCh. 26.
_tThe Dilemma of Defense Intelligence /
_rRichard A. Best, Jr. --
_gPt. 6.
_tIntelligence dissemination --
_gCh. 27.
_tThe Policymaker-Intelligence Relationship /
_rMark M. Lowenthal --
_gCh. 28.
_tOn Uncertainty and the Limits of Intelligence /
_rPeter Jackson --
_gCh. 29.
_tThe Perils of Politicization /
_rPaul Pillar --
_gCh. 30.
_tLeadership in an Intelligence Organization: The Directors of Central Intelligence and the CIA /
_rDavid Robarge --
_gPt. 7.
_tCounterintelligence --
_gCh. 31.
_tThe Future of FBI Counterintelligence through the Lense of the Past One Hundred Years /
_rRay Batvinis --
_gCh. 32.
_tTreason: "'Tis Worse than Murder " /
_rStan A. Taylor & Kayle Buchanan --
_gCh. 33.
_tThe Challenges of Counterintelligence /
_rPaul J. Redman --
_gCh. 34.
_tCatching An Atom Spy: MI5 and the Investigation of Klaus Fuchs /
_rTimothy Gibbs --
_gPt. 8.
_tCovert action --
_gCh. 35.
_tCovert Action, Pentagon Style /
_rJennifer D. Kibbe --
_gCh. 36.
_tCovert Action: United States Law in Substance, Process, and Practice /
_rJames E. Baker --
_gCh. 37.
_tCovert Action: Strengths and Weaknesses /
_rWilliam J. Daugherty --
_gPt. 9.
_tIntelligence accountability.
_gCh. 38.
_tThe Role of Defense in Shaping U.S. Intelligence Reform /
_rJames R. Clapper, Jr --
_gCh. 39.
_tIntelligence and the Law in the United Kingdom /
_rIan Leigh --
_gCh. 40.
_tRethinking the State Secrets Privilege /
_rLouis Fisher --
_gCh. 41.
_tAccounting for the Future or the Past? Developing Accountability and Oversight Systems to Meet Future Intelligence Needs /
_rStuart Farson & Reg Whitaker --
_gCh. 42.
_t"A Very British Institution ": The Intelligence and Security Committee and Intelligence Accountability in the United Kingdom /
_rMark Pythian --
_gCh. 43.
_tThe Politics of Intelligence Accountability /
_rGlenn Hastedt --
_gCh. 44.
_tEthics and Professional Intelligence /
_rMichael Andregg --
_gPt. 10.
_tIntelligence in other lands --
_gCh. 45.
_tIntelligence in the Developing Democracies: The Quest for Transparency and Effectiveness /
_rThomas C. Bruneau & Florina Cristiana (CRIS) Matei --
_gCh. 46.
_tThe Intelligence Services of Russian /
_rRobert W. Pringle --
_gCh. 47.
_tThe German Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND): Evolution and Current Policy Issues /
_rWolfgang Krieger --
_gCh. 48.
_tIsraeli Intelligence: Organization, Failures, and Successes /
_rEphraim Kahana --
_gCh. 49.
_tIntelligence and National Security: The Australian Experience /
_rDavid Martin Jones.
520 _aThe Oxford Handbook of National Security Intelligence is a state-of-the-art work on intelligence and national security. Edited by Loch Johnson, one of the world's leading authorities on the subject, the handbook examines the topic in full, beginning with an examination of the major theories of intelligence. It then shifts its focus to how intelligence agencies operate, how they collect information from around the world, the problems that come with transforming "raw" information into credible analysis, and the difficulties in disseminating intelligence to policymakers. It also considers the balance between secrecy and public accountability, and the ethical dilemmas that covert and counterintelligence operations routinely present to intelligence agencies. Throughout, contributors factor in broader historical and political contexts that are integral to understanding how intelligence agencies function in our information-dominated age.
650 0 _92837
_aIntelligence service
650 0 _9487
_aNational security
650 0 _9486
_aSecurity, International
700 1 _4edt
_92961
_aJohnson, Loch K.,
_d1942-
942 _2ddc
_cBK