Beyond States and Spies
Beyond States and Spies
The Security Intelligence Services of the Private Sector
Sage-Passant, Lewis
Edinburgh University Press
04/2026
360
Mole
Inglês
9781399543668
Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição
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Introduction: Audience-centricity, Risks, and Does Private Sector Intelligence Even Exist?
Audience-centricity
An Inchoate Field
The Risks of Risk Intelligence
Definition Debates: Does Private Sector Intelligence Even Exist?
Structure
Intelligence Literature and the Methodology of Study
The Long and the Short View Literature
The Intelligence Evolution Literature
Corporate Espionage, Competitive, and Market Intelligence Literature
The Private Security Literature
Fieldwork: State of the Field
Limitations
Ethical Grounding of the Research
Conclusion
A History of Private Sector Intelligence
The British East India Company
Lloyd's of London
Rothschild
The Pinkertons and Labour Intelligence
The ONI and Russian Economic Espionage
Buero Ha
Mass Data and the Lightbulb Cartel
The Red Scare
Ulius L. Amoss & the International Services of Information Foundation
Shell Scenarios
The NFL
Aramco and Control Risks
Government Intelligence Support
On Her Majesty's Secret Service?
The Stratfor Leaks
The Snowden Leaks
Uber's Strategic Services Group
Conclusion
The Intelligence Cycle in Private Sector Security Intelligence
Direction and Intelligence Requirements
Collection Practices
Intelligence Sharing
Intelligence Vendors in Collection
Analysis Practices
Dissemination Practices
Secrecy in Private Sector Security Intelligence
Conclusion
The Applications of Private Sector Security Intelligence
Recruitment
Team Structures and Job Titles
Topics of Responsibility
Pandemic Intelligence
Geopolitical Risks
Country Entry, Monitoring, and Exits
Travel Risk Management
Crisis Intelligence
Specifically-Targeted Risks
Terrorism
Activist Intelligence
Modern Activist Intelligence
The New Spies
The Israeli Firms
Drawing the Ethical Line
Conclusion
Conclusion: A New Frontier for Intelligence Studies
Bibliography
Audience-centricity
An Inchoate Field
The Risks of Risk Intelligence
Definition Debates: Does Private Sector Intelligence Even Exist?
Structure
Intelligence Literature and the Methodology of Study
The Long and the Short View Literature
The Intelligence Evolution Literature
Corporate Espionage, Competitive, and Market Intelligence Literature
The Private Security Literature
Fieldwork: State of the Field
Limitations
Ethical Grounding of the Research
Conclusion
A History of Private Sector Intelligence
The British East India Company
Lloyd's of London
Rothschild
The Pinkertons and Labour Intelligence
The ONI and Russian Economic Espionage
Buero Ha
Mass Data and the Lightbulb Cartel
The Red Scare
Ulius L. Amoss & the International Services of Information Foundation
Shell Scenarios
The NFL
Aramco and Control Risks
Government Intelligence Support
On Her Majesty's Secret Service?
The Stratfor Leaks
The Snowden Leaks
Uber's Strategic Services Group
Conclusion
The Intelligence Cycle in Private Sector Security Intelligence
Direction and Intelligence Requirements
Collection Practices
Intelligence Sharing
Intelligence Vendors in Collection
Analysis Practices
Dissemination Practices
Secrecy in Private Sector Security Intelligence
Conclusion
The Applications of Private Sector Security Intelligence
Recruitment
Team Structures and Job Titles
Topics of Responsibility
Pandemic Intelligence
Geopolitical Risks
Country Entry, Monitoring, and Exits
Travel Risk Management
Crisis Intelligence
Specifically-Targeted Risks
Terrorism
Activist Intelligence
Modern Activist Intelligence
The New Spies
The Israeli Firms
Drawing the Ethical Line
Conclusion
Conclusion: A New Frontier for Intelligence Studies
Bibliography
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Intelligence; Surveillance; Covert Action; Influence Operations; Intelligence Cycle; History; Private Sector; Corporations; Intelligence Ethics; Industry; Intelligence scandals; The British East India Company; Lloyd's of London; The Snowden Leaks
Introduction: Audience-centricity, Risks, and Does Private Sector Intelligence Even Exist?
Audience-centricity
An Inchoate Field
The Risks of Risk Intelligence
Definition Debates: Does Private Sector Intelligence Even Exist?
Structure
Intelligence Literature and the Methodology of Study
The Long and the Short View Literature
The Intelligence Evolution Literature
Corporate Espionage, Competitive, and Market Intelligence Literature
The Private Security Literature
Fieldwork: State of the Field
Limitations
Ethical Grounding of the Research
Conclusion
A History of Private Sector Intelligence
The British East India Company
Lloyd's of London
Rothschild
The Pinkertons and Labour Intelligence
The ONI and Russian Economic Espionage
Buero Ha
Mass Data and the Lightbulb Cartel
The Red Scare
Ulius L. Amoss & the International Services of Information Foundation
Shell Scenarios
The NFL
Aramco and Control Risks
Government Intelligence Support
On Her Majesty's Secret Service?
The Stratfor Leaks
The Snowden Leaks
Uber's Strategic Services Group
Conclusion
The Intelligence Cycle in Private Sector Security Intelligence
Direction and Intelligence Requirements
Collection Practices
Intelligence Sharing
Intelligence Vendors in Collection
Analysis Practices
Dissemination Practices
Secrecy in Private Sector Security Intelligence
Conclusion
The Applications of Private Sector Security Intelligence
Recruitment
Team Structures and Job Titles
Topics of Responsibility
Pandemic Intelligence
Geopolitical Risks
Country Entry, Monitoring, and Exits
Travel Risk Management
Crisis Intelligence
Specifically-Targeted Risks
Terrorism
Activist Intelligence
Modern Activist Intelligence
The New Spies
The Israeli Firms
Drawing the Ethical Line
Conclusion
Conclusion: A New Frontier for Intelligence Studies
Bibliography
Audience-centricity
An Inchoate Field
The Risks of Risk Intelligence
Definition Debates: Does Private Sector Intelligence Even Exist?
Structure
Intelligence Literature and the Methodology of Study
The Long and the Short View Literature
The Intelligence Evolution Literature
Corporate Espionage, Competitive, and Market Intelligence Literature
The Private Security Literature
Fieldwork: State of the Field
Limitations
Ethical Grounding of the Research
Conclusion
A History of Private Sector Intelligence
The British East India Company
Lloyd's of London
Rothschild
The Pinkertons and Labour Intelligence
The ONI and Russian Economic Espionage
Buero Ha
Mass Data and the Lightbulb Cartel
The Red Scare
Ulius L. Amoss & the International Services of Information Foundation
Shell Scenarios
The NFL
Aramco and Control Risks
Government Intelligence Support
On Her Majesty's Secret Service?
The Stratfor Leaks
The Snowden Leaks
Uber's Strategic Services Group
Conclusion
The Intelligence Cycle in Private Sector Security Intelligence
Direction and Intelligence Requirements
Collection Practices
Intelligence Sharing
Intelligence Vendors in Collection
Analysis Practices
Dissemination Practices
Secrecy in Private Sector Security Intelligence
Conclusion
The Applications of Private Sector Security Intelligence
Recruitment
Team Structures and Job Titles
Topics of Responsibility
Pandemic Intelligence
Geopolitical Risks
Country Entry, Monitoring, and Exits
Travel Risk Management
Crisis Intelligence
Specifically-Targeted Risks
Terrorism
Activist Intelligence
Modern Activist Intelligence
The New Spies
The Israeli Firms
Drawing the Ethical Line
Conclusion
Conclusion: A New Frontier for Intelligence Studies
Bibliography
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.