Ethics and the Future of Spying
Technology, National Security and Intelligence Collection
Herausgeber: Galliott, Jai; Reed, Warren
Ethics and the Future of Spying
Technology, National Security and Intelligence Collection
Herausgeber: Galliott, Jai; Reed, Warren
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This volume examines the ethical issues generated by recent developments in intelligence collection and offers a.comprehenisve analysis of the key legal, moral and social questions thereby raised.
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This volume examines the ethical issues generated by recent developments in intelligence collection and offers a.comprehenisve analysis of the key legal, moral and social questions thereby raised.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Studies in Intelligence
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 278
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. Januar 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 432g
- ISBN-13: 9781138820395
- ISBN-10: 1138820393
- Artikelnr.: 41097098
- Studies in Intelligence
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 278
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. Januar 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 432g
- ISBN-13: 9781138820395
- ISBN-10: 1138820393
- Artikelnr.: 41097098
Jai Galliott is Research Fellow at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. He holds a PhD in military ethics from Macquarie University, Australia, and was formerly a Naval Officer in the Royal Australian Navy. He is the author of Military Robots: Mapping the moral landscape (2015). Warren Reed is a former intelligence officer with the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS). Trained by MI6 in London, he served for ten years in Asia and the Middle East. He is a regular commentator on intelligence matters, industrial espionage and terrorism.
Introduction
Jai Galliott and Warren Reed PART I: THE MORAL CASE FOR SPYING 1. The Virtues of Bond and Vices of Bauer: An Aristotelian Defence of Espionage
Mark Jensen 2. The Limits of Intelligence Gathering: Gianni Vattimo and the Need to Monitor 'Violent' Thinkers
Matthew Harris 3. The Epistemology of Intelligence Ethics
Alexander Factic PART II: INTERROGATION
TORTURE AND TERRORISM 4. The Human Costs of Torture
Matthew Beard 5. The Implications of Spying and Torture on Human Freedom from a Sartrean Point of View
Martine Berenpas 6. Predictive Markets as an Alternative to One More Spy
Dan Weijers PART III: SPYING AS WAR: CLASSIFICATORY PROBLEMS 7. Persons
Personhood and Proportionality: Building on a Just War Approach to Intelligence Ethics
Kevin McNish 8. Just War
Cyberwar and Cyber-Espionage
Matthew Beard 9. A Dilemma for Indiscriminate Pre-emptive Spying
Nicolas Tavaglione 10. The Morality of Unconventional Force
Thomas Simpson PART IV: REMOTE SURVEILLANCE AND KILLING 11. I
Spy Robot: The Ethics of Robots in National Intelligence Activities
Patric Lin and Shannon Ford 12. Emerging Technologies
Asymmetric Force and Terrorist Blowback
Jai Galliott 13. Targeting Thresholds: The Impact of Intelligence Capability on Ethical Requirements for High-Value Targeting Operations
John Hardy PART V: LEAKS AND SECRETS 14. The NSA Leaks
Edward Snowden and the Ethics and Accountability of Intelligence-Collection
Seumas Miller and Patrick Walsh 15. WikiLeaks and Whistleblowing: Privacy and Consent in an Age of Surveillance
Jeremy Wisnewski PART VI: RESPONSIBILITY AND GOVERNANCE 16. Ethics for Intelligence Officers
Michael Falgoust and Brian Roux 17. 'Due-Care' or a 'Duty-to-Care'? Codes of Ethics in Intelligence Gathering
Jill Hernandez 18. Conclusion: A Spy's Perspective
Warren Reed
Jai Galliott and Warren Reed PART I: THE MORAL CASE FOR SPYING 1. The Virtues of Bond and Vices of Bauer: An Aristotelian Defence of Espionage
Mark Jensen 2. The Limits of Intelligence Gathering: Gianni Vattimo and the Need to Monitor 'Violent' Thinkers
Matthew Harris 3. The Epistemology of Intelligence Ethics
Alexander Factic PART II: INTERROGATION
TORTURE AND TERRORISM 4. The Human Costs of Torture
Matthew Beard 5. The Implications of Spying and Torture on Human Freedom from a Sartrean Point of View
Martine Berenpas 6. Predictive Markets as an Alternative to One More Spy
Dan Weijers PART III: SPYING AS WAR: CLASSIFICATORY PROBLEMS 7. Persons
Personhood and Proportionality: Building on a Just War Approach to Intelligence Ethics
Kevin McNish 8. Just War
Cyberwar and Cyber-Espionage
Matthew Beard 9. A Dilemma for Indiscriminate Pre-emptive Spying
Nicolas Tavaglione 10. The Morality of Unconventional Force
Thomas Simpson PART IV: REMOTE SURVEILLANCE AND KILLING 11. I
Spy Robot: The Ethics of Robots in National Intelligence Activities
Patric Lin and Shannon Ford 12. Emerging Technologies
Asymmetric Force and Terrorist Blowback
Jai Galliott 13. Targeting Thresholds: The Impact of Intelligence Capability on Ethical Requirements for High-Value Targeting Operations
John Hardy PART V: LEAKS AND SECRETS 14. The NSA Leaks
Edward Snowden and the Ethics and Accountability of Intelligence-Collection
Seumas Miller and Patrick Walsh 15. WikiLeaks and Whistleblowing: Privacy and Consent in an Age of Surveillance
Jeremy Wisnewski PART VI: RESPONSIBILITY AND GOVERNANCE 16. Ethics for Intelligence Officers
Michael Falgoust and Brian Roux 17. 'Due-Care' or a 'Duty-to-Care'? Codes of Ethics in Intelligence Gathering
Jill Hernandez 18. Conclusion: A Spy's Perspective
Warren Reed
Introduction
Jai Galliott and Warren Reed PART I: THE MORAL CASE FOR SPYING 1. The Virtues of Bond and Vices of Bauer: An Aristotelian Defence of Espionage
Mark Jensen 2. The Limits of Intelligence Gathering: Gianni Vattimo and the Need to Monitor 'Violent' Thinkers
Matthew Harris 3. The Epistemology of Intelligence Ethics
Alexander Factic PART II: INTERROGATION
TORTURE AND TERRORISM 4. The Human Costs of Torture
Matthew Beard 5. The Implications of Spying and Torture on Human Freedom from a Sartrean Point of View
Martine Berenpas 6. Predictive Markets as an Alternative to One More Spy
Dan Weijers PART III: SPYING AS WAR: CLASSIFICATORY PROBLEMS 7. Persons
Personhood and Proportionality: Building on a Just War Approach to Intelligence Ethics
Kevin McNish 8. Just War
Cyberwar and Cyber-Espionage
Matthew Beard 9. A Dilemma for Indiscriminate Pre-emptive Spying
Nicolas Tavaglione 10. The Morality of Unconventional Force
Thomas Simpson PART IV: REMOTE SURVEILLANCE AND KILLING 11. I
Spy Robot: The Ethics of Robots in National Intelligence Activities
Patric Lin and Shannon Ford 12. Emerging Technologies
Asymmetric Force and Terrorist Blowback
Jai Galliott 13. Targeting Thresholds: The Impact of Intelligence Capability on Ethical Requirements for High-Value Targeting Operations
John Hardy PART V: LEAKS AND SECRETS 14. The NSA Leaks
Edward Snowden and the Ethics and Accountability of Intelligence-Collection
Seumas Miller and Patrick Walsh 15. WikiLeaks and Whistleblowing: Privacy and Consent in an Age of Surveillance
Jeremy Wisnewski PART VI: RESPONSIBILITY AND GOVERNANCE 16. Ethics for Intelligence Officers
Michael Falgoust and Brian Roux 17. 'Due-Care' or a 'Duty-to-Care'? Codes of Ethics in Intelligence Gathering
Jill Hernandez 18. Conclusion: A Spy's Perspective
Warren Reed
Jai Galliott and Warren Reed PART I: THE MORAL CASE FOR SPYING 1. The Virtues of Bond and Vices of Bauer: An Aristotelian Defence of Espionage
Mark Jensen 2. The Limits of Intelligence Gathering: Gianni Vattimo and the Need to Monitor 'Violent' Thinkers
Matthew Harris 3. The Epistemology of Intelligence Ethics
Alexander Factic PART II: INTERROGATION
TORTURE AND TERRORISM 4. The Human Costs of Torture
Matthew Beard 5. The Implications of Spying and Torture on Human Freedom from a Sartrean Point of View
Martine Berenpas 6. Predictive Markets as an Alternative to One More Spy
Dan Weijers PART III: SPYING AS WAR: CLASSIFICATORY PROBLEMS 7. Persons
Personhood and Proportionality: Building on a Just War Approach to Intelligence Ethics
Kevin McNish 8. Just War
Cyberwar and Cyber-Espionage
Matthew Beard 9. A Dilemma for Indiscriminate Pre-emptive Spying
Nicolas Tavaglione 10. The Morality of Unconventional Force
Thomas Simpson PART IV: REMOTE SURVEILLANCE AND KILLING 11. I
Spy Robot: The Ethics of Robots in National Intelligence Activities
Patric Lin and Shannon Ford 12. Emerging Technologies
Asymmetric Force and Terrorist Blowback
Jai Galliott 13. Targeting Thresholds: The Impact of Intelligence Capability on Ethical Requirements for High-Value Targeting Operations
John Hardy PART V: LEAKS AND SECRETS 14. The NSA Leaks
Edward Snowden and the Ethics and Accountability of Intelligence-Collection
Seumas Miller and Patrick Walsh 15. WikiLeaks and Whistleblowing: Privacy and Consent in an Age of Surveillance
Jeremy Wisnewski PART VI: RESPONSIBILITY AND GOVERNANCE 16. Ethics for Intelligence Officers
Michael Falgoust and Brian Roux 17. 'Due-Care' or a 'Duty-to-Care'? Codes of Ethics in Intelligence Gathering
Jill Hernandez 18. Conclusion: A Spy's Perspective
Warren Reed