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From:International Journal (Vol. 64, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedDebate over whether Canada should have a foreign intelligence service has surfaced periodically in public policy debates over the past 40 years. (1) Most recently, prior to the 2006 general election, the Conservative...
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From:Biography (Vol. 36, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed"Shah Mohammed Riza Pahlevi flew here from Baghdad today," the New York Times reported in August 1953, "in a triumphal return to his capital just six days after he had fled the country under threat of dethronement. The...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 25, Issue 1)The newly created national intelligence office directs all agencies in the intelligence community, including the CIA, the National Security Agency, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency and those in the Defense...
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From:The Chronicle of Higher Education (Vol. 51, Issue 29)Byline: DAVID GLENN In 1995, as the American Anthropological Association debated a revision to its code of ethics, Felix Moos made an argument that was unpopular among his peers. Anthropologists, he said, should be...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 26, Issue 6)THE DEFENSE Department and the intelligence community have worked during the past year through a newly unveiled organization to hone technologies for sharing classified data among various levels of secrecy, according to...
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From:Harvard International Review (Vol. 27, Issue 4)US citizens, who have long relied heavily on their intelligence services for the comfort of believing that calamities from abroad will not suddenly afflict them, have made that reliance even heavier in recent years. In...
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From:The Chronicle of Higher Education (Vol. 53, Issue 29)Byline: DAVID GLENN American military and intelligence agencies have increasingly been turning to anthropologists and other social scientists for "cultural knowledge" about actual and potential adversaries. But many...
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From:Cornell Law Review (Vol. 88, Issue 5)INTRODUCTION As terrorism directed at the United States, its citizens, and its foreign interests has increased, (1) so has the United States's effort to enforce its laws criminalizing terrorist activities (2) planned...
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From:International Law Update (Vol. 12, Issue 11) Peer-ReviewedA federal court in North Carolina declined to overturn the conviction of David Passaro (Defendant) for assaulting an Afghan detainee who died afterwards. Prosecutors had put on evidence that Defendant had beaten Abdul...
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From:Information Today (Vol. 9, Issue 1)The Director of Central Intelligence's Information Handling Committee has published a CD-ROM proof-of-concept demonstration disc, for MS-DOS systems, designed to facilitate testing and evaluation of its proposed CD-RDx...
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From:Information Today (Vol. 10, Issue 2)Question: What do James Bond (007) and a CIA analyst have in common? Answer: The search for strategic information. While James Bond has operated in the field, for the most part the U.S. intelligence community has...
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From:Organization Science (Vol. 22, Issue 6) Peer-Reviewed
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 25, Issue 10)New forms of intelligence-gathering--including the availability of open-source information on the Internet--are becoming increasingly important for fighting terrorism and may even reduce the need for more traditional...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 25, Issue 5)DALE W. MEYERROSE IS TAKING COMMAND of intelligence agencies' IT, from procurement to standards to certification and accreditation of systems, and he isn't being bashful about how he is doing it. The retired Air Force...
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From:Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (Vol. 58, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIN A REVIEW OF JAMES BAMFORD'S book, Body of Secrets (January/February 2002 Bulletin), Thomas Blanton states that Bamford "is ahead on points in discussing the U.S.S. Liberty mystery of June 1967." I would remind the...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 26, Issue 19)THE NATIONWIDE network of fusion centers intended to gather counterterrorism intelligence is suffering from a lack of direction from the Homeland Security Department, said the chairman of the House Homeland Security...
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From:Information Today (Vol. 33, Issue 4)Andrew Neblett became president of ALM Intelligence. He will guide ALM's cross-vertical strategic direction and product road map, as well as strengthen the company's operations and improve its data analytics, research,...
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From:Harvard International Review (Vol. 42, Issue 2)The United States government labels them HIDDEN COBRA. In 2013, the South Korean financial system fell victim to a mysterious "Whols Team." The attackers behind the Sony Pictures hack called themselves the "Guardians of...
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From:World Policy Journal (Vol. 28, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedMOSCOW -- When the Soviet Union collapsed, many observers expected its fearsome intelligence apparatus to wither as well. Instead, the post-Soviet era has seen the emergence of an even more influential collection of...
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From:Issues in Science and Technology (Vol. 15, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedDefense Sec William Cohen's suggestion that the civil liberties enjoyed by Americans would have to be diminished to combat terrorism is ill-advised. Increasing surveillance and therefore undermining civil liberties to...