Fr. 70.00

Problematising Intelligence Studies - Towards a New Research Agenda

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This book offers a new research agenda for intelligence studies in contemporary times.
In contrast to Intelligence Studies (IS), whose aim has largely been to improve the performance of national security services and assist in policy making, this book takes the investigation of the new professionals and everyday practices of intelligence as the immediate point of departure. Starting from the observation that intelligence today is increasingly about counter-terrorism, crime control, surveillance, and other security-related issues, this book adopts a transdisciplinary approach for studying the shifting logics of intelligence, how it has come to involve an expanding number of empirical sites, such as the police, local community, prison and the Internet, as well as a corresponding multiplicity of new actors in these domains. Shifting the focus away from traditional spies and Anglo-American intelligence services, this book addresses the transformations of contemporary intelligence through empirically detailed and theoretically innovative analyses, making a key contribution to existing scholarship.
This book will be of much interest to students of intelligence studies, critical security studies, foreign policy, and International Relations.

List of contents

PART 1: Reconstructing the Object of Intelligence  1. Introduction: What's the Problem with Intelligence Studies? Outlining a New Research Agenda on Contemporary Intelligence  2. Towards a Reflexive Study of Intelligence Accountability  3. Tracing Pre-Emptive Intelligence-Led Policing (ILP): Immigration, Classification Struggles, and the Expansion of Intelligence Logics in British Policing  PART 2: The Practical Transformations of Contemporary Intelligence  4. Citizen-Led Intelligence Gathering under UK's Prevent Duty  5. Prison Intelligence in France: An Empirical Investigation of the Emergence of Counter-Radicalisation Professionals  6. Manufacturing Intelligence: Police and Intelligence Services in Germany  7. Transversal Practices of Everyday Intelligence Work in New Zealand: Transnationalism, Commercialism, Diplomacy  8. The Techno-Legal Boundaries of Intelligence: NSA and FRA's Collaborations in Transatlantic Mass Surveillance  PART 3: Conceptual Reconsiderations of Intelligence  9. Regulating the Internet in Times of Mass Surveillance: A Universal Global Space with Universal Human Rights?  10. After Cambridge Analytica: Rethinking Surveillance in the Age of (Com)Modification  11. Violence Performed in Secret by State Agents: For an Alternative Problematisation of Intelligence Studies  PART 4: Conclusion  12. Conclusion: Towards New Intelligence Studies

About the author

Hager Ben Jaffel is a Research Associate at the National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), Paris, France.
Sebastian Larsson is an Associate Senior Lecturer in War Studies at the Swedish Defence University, Sweden.

Summary

This book offers a new research agenda for intelligence studies in contemporary times.

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