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Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary.This Research Agenda explores the academic field of intelligence studies and how it is developing into an increasingly international and diverse area of study.As more governments release records, and as new generations of scholars engage with the topic from a range of perspectives, the book considers how the field is becoming richer, wider, and more global in scope. Featuring contributions by a diverse range of leading intelligence scholars, it surveys a variety of core areas in, and approaches to, the study of intelligence - including technological perspectives, gender, deception, and the ‘deep state’ - highlighting how intelligence will become a greater feature of government and security in the future. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, the book explores not only the established elements of intelligence studies, but analyses the cutting edge of intelligence research and proposes an agenda for the continued development of the field.Offering concise and accessible discussions of developing topics in intelligence studies, this Research Agenda will be a useful guide for scholars and students of public policy, international relations and security. It will also be of interest to professionals engaged in research into security and intelligence matters.
Edited by Robert Dover, Professor of Intelligence and National Security, the School of Criminology, Sociology and Policing, University of Hull, Huw Dylan, Reader in Intelligence and International Security and Michael S. Goodman, Professor of Intelligence and International Affairs, Department of War Studies, King’s College London, UK
Contents:1 Introduction to A Research Agenda for IntelligenceStudies and Government 1Robert Dover, Huw Dylan and Michael S. GoodmanPART I EMERGING RESEARCH TRENDS ININTELLIGENCE STUDIES2 Critical Security and Intelligence Studies 9Claudia Aradau and Emma McCluskey3 Culture in Intelligence Studies 21Simon Willmetts4 Equality, Diversity and Inclusion in Intelligence Studies 35Huw Bennett and Claudia Hillebrand5 AI and Ethics in Intelligence 49Sarah Mainwaring6 Intelligence Leadership 63Patrick F. WalshPART II THE GAPS IN OUR UNDERSTANDING7 Intelligence and Biosecurity 79Filippa Lentzos8 Global Intelligence Studies 93Daniela Richterova9 Private Sector Intelligence 103Damien Van Puyvelde and Sonia Sangiovanni10 The Impact of Technology on Intelligence Analysis 113Kathleen M. VogelPART III REFRAMING INTELLIGENCE STUDIES11 Why Intelligence Analysts Need to Write Long Papers 127Tim Dickens12 Deception and Intelligence in Peace and War 141Gary Buck and Huw Dylan13 The Deep State: Definitional Debates and Impacts 155Robert Dover14 Teaching Intelligence: Decolonisation, (Distance)Education and the Global Student 167Helen Dexter15 Post-Modern Archival Research 181Berenice BurnettBibliography 193Index
‘Intelligence studies now expands well beyond the realm of traditional espionage into international affairs, digital media, AI and big data, private sector analysis and many other areas. Dover, Dylan and Goodman, experienced scholars, have given us the essential guide we need to the state of modern intelligence studies and its future direction.’