This book features a comparative study in intelligence accountability and governance across the Five Eyes: the imperative for member countries of the world's most powerful intelligence alliance to reconcile democracy and security through transparent standards, guidelines, legal frameworks, executive directives, and international law. It argues that intelligence accountability is best understood not as an end in itself but as a means that is integral democratic governance. On the one hand, to assure the executive of government and the public that the activities of intelligence agencies are lawful and, if not, to identify breaches in compliance. On the other hand, to raise awareness of and appreciation for the intelligence function, and whether it is being carried out in the most effective, efficient, and innovative way possible to achieve its objective. The analysis shows how the addition of legislative and judicial components to executive and administrative accountability has been shaping evolving institutions, composition, practices, characteristics, and cultures of intelligence oversight and review in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand using a most-similar systems design. Democracies are engaged in an asymmetric struggle against unprincipled adversaries. Technological change is enabling unprecedented social and political disruption. These threat vectors have significantly affected, altered, and expanded the role, powers and capabilities of intelligence organizations. Accountability aims to reassure sceptics that intelligence and security practices are indeed aligned with the rules and values that democracies claim to defend.
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Leuprecht and McNorton offer the only systematic comparison of the world's most powerful intelligence alliance, colloquially known as the Five Eyes: the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. The book examines developments and mechanisms in holding each country's intelligence community accountable.
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1: Introduction: The Democratic-Intelligence Paradox 2: Comparing Intelligence Accountability: Analytical Framework, Theories and Trends 3: United States of America 4: United Kingdom 5: Canada 6: Australia 7: New Zealand 8: Varieties of Intelligence Accountability: The Institutional Foundations of Comparative Democratic Advantage 9: Foundations of Intelligence Accountability in Democratic Regimes
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An invaluable vade mecum to all who are curious about how democratic countries might improve the ways in which they collect and act upon intelligence. This book is a model of its kind.
The only comparative book on the Five Eyes: the world's most powerful and exclusive intelligence alliance It is the first systematic comparative book on reconciling security imperatives with democratic norms. Each country chapter surveys the member organizations of the intelligence community, the strategic environment that informed their historical and current development, the national security priorities from the vantage point of each country, and the concomitant intelligence accountability architecture. References include a wealth of primary source material across five countries that has never before been collected comprehensively.
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Christian Leuprecht is Class of 1965 Professor in Leadership, Department of Political Science and Economics, Royal Military College; Director of the Institute of Intergovernmental Relations, School of Policy Studies, Queen's University; and Adjunct Research Professor, Australian Graduate School of Policing and Security, Charles Sturt University. Ms. Hayley McNorton is a fellow at the Centre for International and Defence Policy at Queen's University of which she is also a graduate.
Les mer
The only comparative book on the Five Eyes: the world's most powerful and exclusive intelligence alliance It is the first systematic comparative book on reconciling security imperatives with democratic norms. Each country chapter surveys the member organizations of the intelligence community, the strategic environment that informed their historical and current development, the national security priorities from the vantage point of each country, and the concomitant intelligence accountability architecture. References include a wealth of primary source material across five countries that has never before been collected comprehensively.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780192893949
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
576 gr
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
165 mm
Dybde
20 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
272

Biographical note

Christian Leuprecht is Class of 1965 Professor in Leadership, Department of Political Science and Economics, Royal Military College; Director of the Institute of Intergovernmental Relations, School of Policy Studies, Queen's University; and Adjunct Research Professor, Australian Graduate School of Policing and Security, Charles Sturt University. Ms. Hayley McNorton is a fellow at the Centre for International and Defence Policy at Queen's University of which she is also a graduate.