Description

Book Synopsis
The question of how far a state should authorise its agents to go in seeking and using secret intelligence is one of the big unresolved issues of public policy for democracies today. The tension between security and privacy sits at the heart of broader debates concerning the relationship between the citizen and the state. The public needs-and wants-protection from the very serious threats posed by domestic and international terrorism, from serious criminality, to be safe in using cyberspace, and to have active foreign and aid policies to help resolve outstanding international problems. Secret intelligence is widely accepted to be essential to these tasks, and to be a legitimate function of the nation state, yet the historical record is that it also can pose significant ethical risks.Principled Spying lays out a framework for thinking about public policy in this area by clarifying the relationship between ethics and intelligence, both human and technical. In this book, intelligence expe

Trade Review
This is a work of the highest seriousness. It is a teasing out, in Platonic dialogue form, of what ethical spine a spy should in a democracy, must have. * John Lloyd, Financial Times *
Omand brings to the subject mature experience, deep thought and high seriousness. It is difficult to imagine anyone better qualified. * Rodric Braithwaite, Survival *
A provocative work by an intelligence mandarin and senior scholar, both committed to ethical discourse and principles. * Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones, author of We Know All about You: The Story of Surveillance in Britain and America *

Table of Contents
Preface Introduction: Why Ethics Matters in Secret Intelligence 1: Thinking About the Ethical Conduct of Secret Intelligence 2: Ethics, Intelligence and the Law 3: From Just War to Just Intelligence? 4: Secret Agents and Covert Human Sources 5: Digital Intelligence and Cyberspace 6: The Ethics of Using Intelligence 7: Building Confidence Through Oversight and Accountability Conclusion: Towards a Safe and Sound Future Select Bibliography Index

Principled Spying The Ethics of Secret

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    A Hardback by David Omand, Mark Phythian

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      View other formats and editions of Principled Spying The Ethics of Secret by David Omand

      Publisher: Oxford University Press
      Publication Date: 28/06/2018
      ISBN13: 9780198785590, 978-0198785590
      ISBN10: 0198785593

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The question of how far a state should authorise its agents to go in seeking and using secret intelligence is one of the big unresolved issues of public policy for democracies today. The tension between security and privacy sits at the heart of broader debates concerning the relationship between the citizen and the state. The public needs-and wants-protection from the very serious threats posed by domestic and international terrorism, from serious criminality, to be safe in using cyberspace, and to have active foreign and aid policies to help resolve outstanding international problems. Secret intelligence is widely accepted to be essential to these tasks, and to be a legitimate function of the nation state, yet the historical record is that it also can pose significant ethical risks.Principled Spying lays out a framework for thinking about public policy in this area by clarifying the relationship between ethics and intelligence, both human and technical. In this book, intelligence expe

      Trade Review
      This is a work of the highest seriousness. It is a teasing out, in Platonic dialogue form, of what ethical spine a spy should in a democracy, must have. * John Lloyd, Financial Times *
      Omand brings to the subject mature experience, deep thought and high seriousness. It is difficult to imagine anyone better qualified. * Rodric Braithwaite, Survival *
      A provocative work by an intelligence mandarin and senior scholar, both committed to ethical discourse and principles. * Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones, author of We Know All about You: The Story of Surveillance in Britain and America *

      Table of Contents
      Preface Introduction: Why Ethics Matters in Secret Intelligence 1: Thinking About the Ethical Conduct of Secret Intelligence 2: Ethics, Intelligence and the Law 3: From Just War to Just Intelligence? 4: Secret Agents and Covert Human Sources 5: Digital Intelligence and Cyberspace 6: The Ethics of Using Intelligence 7: Building Confidence Through Oversight and Accountability Conclusion: Towards a Safe and Sound Future Select Bibliography Index

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