1st Edition

The Ethics of National Security Intelligence Institutions Theory and Applications

    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book explores the ethics of national security intelligence institutions operating in contemporary liberal democracies.

    Intelligence collection by agencies such as the CIA, MI6, and Mossad involves practices that are apparently inconsistent with the principles of ordinary morality – practices such as lying, spying, manipulation, and covert action. However, in the defence of national security, such practices may not only be morally permissible, but may also under some circumstances be morally obligatory. One approach to the ethics of national security intelligence activity has been to draw from the just war tradition (so-called ‘just intelligence theory’). This book identifies significant limitations of this approach and offers a new, institutionally based, teleological normative framework. In doing so, it revises some familiar principles designed for application to kinetic wars, such as necessity and proportionality, and invokes some additional ones, such as reciprocity and trust. It goes on to explore the applications of this framework and a revised set of principles for national security intelligence institutions and practices in contemporary and emerging political and technological settings.

    This book will be of much interest to students of intelligence studies, ethics, security studies and International Relations.

    1. Institutionalising Intelligence Ethics: The Case for a Just Intelligence Theory

    Adam Henschke and Patrick F. Walsh   

    Part One: Concepts and Principles for Just Intelligence Institutions   

    2. On National Security Intelligence: Concepts and Contexts

    Seumas Miller

    3. On Just Intelligence Operations: Exceptions and Explanations

    Adam Henschke

    4. National Security Intelligence Activity: The Principles of Discrimination, Necessity, and Proportionality

    Seumas Miller

    Part Two: Principles of Just Intelligence Institutions in Action          

    5. Espionage: Ends and Means

    Seumas Miller

    6. Covert Action: The Ethics of Secret National Security Operations

    Andrew Alexandra

    7. PSYOP and Intelligence Institutions

    Andrew Alexandra

    Part Three: The Future of Intelligence and the Evolution of Intelligence Institutions

    8. Privacy as Digital Sovereignty: Rethinking Privacy for International Intelligence

    Adam Henschke

    9. Beyond Independence: The Ethics of Trustworthy Intelligence Institutions

    Adam Henschke

    10. Changing Practices, Disruptive Technologies, and the Evolution of Intelligence Institutions

    Adam Henschke, Patrick  F. Walsh and Roger Bradbury

    11. The Future of Intelligence Practice: Concluding Lessons for Just Intelligence Institutions

    Patrick F. Walsh and Adam Henschke

    Biography

    Adam Henschke is an Assistant Professor with the Philosophy Section at the University of Twente in the Netherlands.

    Seumas Miller is a Professor with the Australian Graduate School of Policing and Security at Charles Sturt University, in Australia, and a Distinguished Research Fellow at Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics at Oxford University.

    Andrew Alexandra is an Adjunct Senior Fellow with the School of Historical and Philosophical Studies at Melbourne University, in Australia.

    Patrick F. Walsh is Professor of Intelligence and Security Studies with the Australian Graduate School of Policing and Security at Charles Sturt University, in Australia.

    Roger Bradbury is Emeritus Professor of Complex Systems Science with the Crawford School of Public Policy at the Australian National University in Australia.