Publication |
2013.
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Summary/Abstract |
The current rapid expansion of Intelligence Studies 1 is being driven by an increased need for intelligence in an unpredictable post-post Cold War world 2 that features complex operational contexts requiring special expertise, 3 private contractors increasingly performing core intelligence functions, 4 and intelligence missions expanding into completely new fields such as humanitarian action. 5 These trends, unlikely to be reversed in the immediate future, create a demand for the academic training of personnel in growing and diversifying intelligence communities. This will in turn generate an inherent pressure to further establish Intelligence Studies as a separate academic discipline. Not surprisingly, the hitherto fruitless search for a "theory of intelligence" has been rekindled. 6 Considering developments in adjacent disciplines, epistemological issues will, in all likelihood, increasingly come into focus. 7 Among them: What is "knowledge" in intelligence, and what counts as "true" or "justified" knowledge, if any?
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