Reforming Intelligence : Obstacles to Democratic Control and Effectiveness.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780292794764
- 353.1/72367
- JF1525
Intro -- Contents -- Foreword: Intelligence, Civil-Intelligence Relations, and Democracy (Robert Jervis) -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Intelligence Reform: Balancing Democracy and Effectiveness (Thomas C. Bruneau and Steven C. Boraz) -- Part One: Challenges to Effective Intelligence in Modern Democracies -- One: Executive Privilege: Intelligence Oversight in the United States (Steven C. Boraz) -- Two: Rethinking Judicial Oversight of Intelligence (Elizabeth Rindskopf Parker and Bryan Pate) -- Three: U.S. Intelligence Prior to 9/11 and Obstacles to Reform (William J. Lahneman) -- Four: Keeping ''Earthly Awkwardness'': Failures of Intelligence in the United Kingdom (Peter Gill) -- Five: Cultural Legacies of French Intelligence (Douglas Porch) -- Part Two: Democratic Control of Intelligence in New Democracies -- Six: Structural Change and Democratic Control of Intelligence in Brazil (Marco Cepik) -- Seven: Taiwan's Intelligence Reform in an Age of Democratization (Steven E. Phillips) -- Eight: Establishing Democratic Control of Intelligence in Argentina (Priscila Carlos Brandão Antunes) -- Nine: Romania's Transition To Democracy and the Role of the Press in Intelligence Reform (Cristiana Matei) -- Ten: Transforming Intelligence in South Africa (Kenneth R. Dombroski) -- Eleven: Terrorism's Threat To New Democracies: The Case of Russia (Mikhail Tsypkin) -- Twelve: Ethical and Moral Issues in Intelligence Reform: The Philippines (Douglas J. Macdonald) -- Conclusion: Best Practices: Balancing Democracy and Effectiveness (Steven C. Boraz and Thomas C. Bruneau) -- Selected Bibliography -- About the Contributors -- Index.
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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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