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Informationen zum Autor David Carment, Martin Rudner Klappentext This book is an edited collection of essays on the emerging new form of intelligence known as Peacekeeping Intelligence [PKI]. This is the based on predominantly open sources of information used to create Open Source Intelligence [OSINT], and it demands multi-lateral sharing of intelligence at all levels. Unlike national intelligence, which emphasizes spies, satellites and secrecy, Peacekeeping Intelligence brings together many aspects of intelligence gathering, including the media and NGOs. It seeks to establish standards in open source collection, analysis, security and counterintelligence and training, and produces unclassified intelligence useful to the public. The challenges it faces are increasingly entwined with arms control, commercial interests, international crime and ethnic conflict. This volume evaluates the role and dynamics of intelligence in peacekeeping activities as well as the challenges, and considers the intelligence role of coalition forces, law enforcement agencies, development institutions and NGOs that have become important in peace-support operations. The book will appeal to scholars of intelligence, peacekeeping and security studies, as well as to practitioners in the field of peacekeeping and non-governmental organizations. Zusammenfassung This is a new evaluation of the role, dynamics and challenges of intelligence in peacekeeping activities and its place in a much wider social, economic and political context. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Introduction: Peacekeeping Intelligence: New Players and Extended Boundaries Part I. Peacekeeping and its Intelligence Requirements 2. Beyond the Next Bound: The Future of Military Intelligence in Peace Support Operations 3. A Reading Of Tea Leaves - Toward a Framework for Modern PKI 4. SIGINT And Peacekeeping: The Untapped Intelligence Resource 5. C4ISR and Peacekeeping Part II. Evolution of Intelligence in Multinational Peacekeeping Missions 6. Intelligence at UN Headquarters? The Information and Research (I&R) Unit and the Intervention in Eastern Zaire (1996) 7. International Anarchy and Coalition Interoperability in High Tech Environments 8. Peacekeeping Intelligence and Civil Society: Is CIMIC the missing link? Part III. New Elements of Intelligence Analysis 9. Field Research on Small Arms and Its Importance for Peace Operations: A Practitioner's View 10. Peacekeeping Intelligence for the Stakeholders: An Underutilized Open Source Resource 11. Just Peacekeeping: Managing the Relationship between Peacekeeping Intelligence and the Prevention and Punishment of International Crimes 12. Ethical Issues: Peacekeeping and Intelligence 13. Enabling Intelligence in Peacekeeping: Laying the Groundwork for Effective Education and Training 14. A Bridge too Far?: The Theory and Practice of the Effects-Based Concept and the Multinational Inter-Agency Role ...