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Public and Private Intelligence: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives

NCJ Number
247144
Journal
Salus Journal Volume: 2 Issue: 1 Dated: 2013 Pages: 21-39
Author(s)
Ruth Delaforce
Date Published
2013
Length
19 pages
Annotation
Intelligence is often regarded as information that is special or different, which must be safely kept.
Abstract
Intelligence is often regarded as information that is special or different, which must be safely kept. When sought, collected or used by the private sector, as opposed to public agencies, concerns are raised on the purpose and propriety of such an activity. However, in an historical context, intelligence collection or sharing between public and private interests for the purpose of national security was not unusual, particularly during the Cold War. Case studies from this era indicate that overlapping concerns were economic success combined with political strategy. Glimpses of these shared interests between the state and business can also be identified in the immediate post-Cold War era, and the aftermath of terrorist attacks in 2001. Perhaps the greatest contemporary change is not that "private" and "public "intelligence is shared between business and state, but the extent of such an enterprise. Further issues related to this change are: state dominance in the public-private relationship; potential fragmentation in the intelligence process; gaps in the historical record; and implications for future generations of intelligence professionals.