Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:882Hits:24721989Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID159924
Title ProperIntelligence and the liberal conscience
LanguageENG
AuthorPhythian, Mark
Summary / Abstract (Note)The question of how to reconcile the practice of national security intelligence with the values on which liberal democracies are understood to be based was very much present at the creation of Intelligence Studies. At a time when the conceptual landscape of Intelligence Studies has broadened, this article represents a revisiting of these first principles. In it, I explain the normative tension between the requirements of liberal democratic orders and the practice of national security intelligence as arising from three sources. First, the confusions that arise from liberalism itself as an ideology. Second, the constraining effect of the international. Third, the constraining ‘problem’ of the nature of the liberal democratic state. In light of these and contemporary anxieties about the implications of intelligence practice for liberal values, I discuss how far it is possible or useful to think in terms of ‘liberal intelligence’ and what its core characteristics might be held to be.
`In' analytical NoteIntelligence and National Security Vol. 33, No.4; Jun 2018: p.502-516
Journal SourceIntelligence and National Security Vol: 33 No 4
Key WordsIntelligence ;  Liberal Conscience


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text