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Intelligence Studies Panels at ISA 2015

18-21 February 2015 in New Orleans, LA


See below for the preliminary program of the Intelligence Studies Section (ISS) (and related intelligence
studies panels, in italics) at the annual International Studies Association (ISA) conference taking place
18-21 February 2015 in New Orleans.
ISS is one of 27 subject matter sections that make up the ISA. ISS has approximately 350 members, and
has been sponsoring research about intelligence as a function of government since the mid-1980s.
Additional information can be found here: http://www.isanet.org/ISA/Sections/ISS.aspx
This ISS content (4 straight days...24 panels) is one small part of ISAs much larger conference. The full
conference program is over 200 pages; find details at the full conference website here:
http://www.isanet.org/Conferences/New-Orleans-2015
As the chair of the Intelligence Studies Section, if you have any questions please contact me at
marrinsp@jmu.edu or spm8p@yahoo.com
Regards,
Dr. Stephen Marrin
Associate Professor
ISAT/Intelligence Analysis
James Madison University
http://www.isat.jmu.edu/people/marrin.html
---------------------------------------------------------------WEDNESDAY 18 FEBRUARY 2015
WA19: Wednesday 8:15 AM - 10:00 AM
Intelligence Beyond the Anglosphere
Chair Irena Dumitru (National Intelligence Academy)
Intelligence Community Reform in Japan
Yoshiki Kobayashi (National Police Agency of Japan)
Re-Conceptualising Intelligence in Africa: Assessing the Role of
Intelligence Within the Broader US and Uganda Security Partnership
Joshua Shurley (University of Manchester)
Activist Thrust of Traditional Chinese Intelligence
Ralph Sawyer (Independent Scholar)
Organizational Perspectives on Intelligence Cooperation: Towards the Building of Intelligence Regional
Leadership in European Context
Elena-Daniela Baches (Brunel University)
WA35: Wednesday 8:15 AM - 10:00 AM
Economic Intelligence and National Policy: the Lessons of the Cold War
Chair & Disc. Joe Wippl (Boston University)
Israel's Economic Intelligence Collection and Analysis: Origins, Trends and Implications
Tamir Libel (University College Dublin)
British Economic Intelligence, "Hot" and "Cold" Economic Warfare
Michael Seibold (Kampmann, Berg & Partners, Germany)
The West's Spies in the German Democratic Republic's Economy during the Cold War
Paul Maddrell (Loughborough University)
Caveat Emptor: How British Intell exploited trade with Communist world to fight Cold War, 1948-1953
Huw Dylan (King's College London)
Lessons Learned from the CIA's Assessment of the Soviet Economy
Timothy R. Walton (James Madison University)

Intelligence Studies Panels at ISA 2015


18-21 February 2015 in New Orleans, LA
WA78: Wednesday 8:15 AM - 10:00 AM
Intelligence oversight: comparing understandings and approaches.
Chair Peter Gill (University of Liverpool)
Part. Eduardo E. Estevez (Foundation for Economic Studies and Public Policy (FEEPP))
Part. Loch K. Johnson (University of Georgia)
Part. Stefania Paladini (Coventry University)
WA80: Wednesday 8:15 AM - 10:00 AM
The Politics of Surveillance in the United States
Chair Amentahru Wahlrab (University of Texas at Tyler)
Disc. John A. Gentry (National Intelligence University)
Surveillance, Big Data, and the Future of Global Politics
James Skelly and Christian Eichenmller (Baker Institute, Juniata College)
Criminal Background Investigations and Social Control in Neoliberal America
Charles Brackett (University of Massachusetts-Boston)
Leveraging US Mass Surveillance to Advance Interests in Global Internet Governance
Tatevik Sargsyan (American University)
You are Being Watched: The Implications of US Surveillance on Democracy and its Promotion
Nelli Babayan (Freie Universitt Berlin)
Ubiquitous surveillance for paranoid security apparatus, or how mass security surveillance threatens the
democratic space of revelation and deliberation
Simon Hogue (Universit d'Ottawa)
WB22: Wednesday 10:30 AM - 12:15 PM
Journalists and the Clandestine World: Intelligence-Media Relationships in Five Countries
Chair Richard James Aldrich (University of Warwick)
Parallel lives? The CIA and the Press in the field
Richard James Aldrich (University of Warwick)
Putting Lives in Danger? Tinker, Tailor, Journalist, Spy: the Use of Journalistic Cover by MI6.
Paul Lashmar (Brunel University)
New Challenges, Old Methods: The Israeli Intelligence and the Media
Clila Magen (Bar-Ilan University)
Writing in a Time of War: Journalism, Oversight and Colombias Intelligence Community
Zakia Shiraz (University of Warwick)
The Public Dimension of Intelligence Culture In Search for Support and Legitimacy
Olli J. Teirila (Finnish National Defence University)
WB24: Wednesday 10:30 AM - 12:15 PM
Roads Not Taken in the Development of American Intelligence
Chair & Disc. Benjamin Fischer (Retired)
Who's in Charge? Alternate Strategic Paths for Information Security in the United States
Michael Warner (US Department of Defense)
The US Secret Service & American National Security at the Dawn of US Intelligence: A Road Not Taken
John F. Fox, Jr.
The US State Department's On-Again, Off-Again Relationship with Intelligence
Mark Stout (Johns Hopkins University)
The Siren Song of Ender's Game
Mike W. Fowler (US Air Force Academy)
The Rise and Fall of the Strategic Studies Detachment
Mark David Luce (US Army Special Operations Command)

Intelligence Studies Panels at ISA 2015


18-21 February 2015 in New Orleans, LA
WC02: Wednesday 1:45PM-3:30PM
Knowing The Adversary: Leaders, Intelligence and
Assessment of Intentions in International Relations
Participants: David M. Edelstein (Georgetown University);Charlie Glaser (George Washington
University); Jack S. Levy (Rutgers University); Janice Gross Stein (University of Toronto);
Stephen Martin Walt (Harvard University); Keren Milo (Princeton University
WC06: Wednesday 1:45PM 3:30PM
Assessing Non-State Threats: Global and Regional Perspectives on Terrorism & Transnational Crime
Chair John P. Sullivan (Los Angeles Sheriffs Dept) & Robert Bunker (Claremont Graduate University)
Disc. Daniel Gressang (US Department of Defense) & James Wirtz (Naval Postgraduate School)
NarcoAlliances and the Rise of Criminal Networks in the Americas: Reshaping the Intelligence Process
Irina A. Chindea (Fletcher School, Tufts University)
Countering Radicalization in the Community and in Prison Environments
Rick Parent (Simon Fraser University, School of Criminology)
Assessing Criminal Terrorist Convergence: Intelligence Coproduction for Transnational Threats
John P. Sullivan (Los Angeles Sheriff's Department)
Networked Responses to Organized Crime: Countering Gang Involved Human Trafficking
Ami Carpenter (University of San Diego)
Successful intelligence Operations or Politicized Paranoia? Thwarted Bombing of Falcon Lake Dam
Nathan Jones (Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy)
WC13: Wednesday 1:45 PM - 3:30 PM
The study of intelligence in Britain: reflections on the past, present and future
Chair Julian J. Richards (University of Buckingham)
Disc. Wesley Wark (University of Ottawa)
Social Science and the Development of Intelligence Studies in the UK
Mark Phythian (University of Leicester)
Uncovering Covert Action: Reflections on the British Experience
Rory Cormac (University of Warwick)
Intelligence, international terrorism, and the public policy project
Julian J. Richards (University of Buckingham)
Comparing National Approaches to Intelligence: A ProblemBased Approach
Peter Mattis (University of Cambridge)
WC41: Wednesday 1:45 PM - 3:30 PM
An International And Comparative Perspective On National Strategic Foresight Approaches
Chair: Catarina Isabel Tully (Strategy & Security Institute, Exeter University, UK)
Disc. Stephan De Spiegeleire (The Hague Centre for Strategic Studies)
Practicing Foresight Analysis in Intelligence Courses
William J. Lahneman (Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University)
Using Foresight Techniques to Assess Central Bank Security Risk
Dalene Duvenage (South African Reserve Bank)
An international comparison of institutional structures, governance & methods of crossgovernment
foresight processes
Catarina Isabel Tully (Strategy & Security Institute, Exeter University, UK)
From Strategic Orientation to Strategic Navigation: Use & Utility of Security Foresight in Policy Making
in W Europe
Tim Sweijs (King's College London) and Stephan DeSpiegeleire (Hague Centre for Strategic Studies)
Contested Global Governance in the 21st Century: Framing the Structures of a Multipolar World
Shaun Riordan (London School of Economics

Intelligence Studies Panels at ISA 2015


18-21 February 2015 in New Orleans, LA
WD40: Wednesday 4:00 PM - 5:45 PM
Reflections on the Intelligence Studies Section at 30
Chair Stephen Marrin (James Madison University)
Part. Richard R. Valcourt (International Journal of Intelligence)
Part. Jefferson Adams (Sarah Lawrence College)
Part. Daniel S. Gressang (US Department of Defense)
Part. James J. Wirtz (Naval Postgraduate School)
WD61: Wednesday 4:00 PM - 5:45 PM
Teaching and education in intelligence. Building bridges across cultures and continents
Chair Ion Grosu (Romanian Intelligence Service)
Disc. Michael Andregg (University of St. Thomas)
The Public Dimension of Intelligence Culture In Search for Support and Legitimacy
Olli J. Teirila (Finnish National Defence University)
Course Correction An Interdisciplinary Approach to Teaching Intelligence Studies
Cathryn Thurston (National Intelligence University) and Cindy L. Courville (National Defense
Intelligence College)
Challenges for intelligence education and training in the Knowledge Society
Niculae Iancu (Romanian Domestic Intelligence Service (SRI))
New challenges and opportunities in research intelligence.
Irena Dumitru (National Intelligence Academy)
A pool of interconnected simulations: structuring intelligence training and education programs.
Bogdan Prisecaru (National Intelligence Academy)
EVENING EVENT: Intelligence Studies Section 30th Anniversary Reception

THURSDAY 19 FEBRUARY 2015


TA42: Thursday 8:15 AM - 10:00 AM
Historical Perspectives on Intelligence
Chair and Disc: Stephen Marrin (James Madison University)
Americas evolution of women and their roles in the Intelligence Community
Amy Martin (Marymount University in Arlington, VA)
A Post-Hoover Bureau: The FBI In The 1970s
Melissa A. Graves (University of Mississippi)
Intelligence puzzles: How wars that never happened in the Black Sea Region shaped the future of conflict
and what should we expect next?
Bogdan Prisecaru (National Intelligence Academy)
Dirty Work? The Use of Nazi Informants by U.S. Military Intelligence in Postwar Europe.
Thomas Boghardt (U.S. Army Center of Military History)
Blinking Red: A Reassessment of the Air India Bombing as an Intelligence Failure.
Andrew Brunatti (Brunel University)

Intelligence Studies Panels at ISA 2015


18-21 February 2015 in New Orleans, LA
TA61: Thursday 8:15 AM - 10:00 AM
Intelligence in an Age of Cyber Espionage
Chair Catherine Lotrionte (Georgetown University)
Disc. Chris Bronk (Rice University)
A Hard Line to Hoe: The Possibility of International Norms to Limit Economic Espionage
Roger Hurwitz (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Aseops Wolves: The Deceptive Appearance of Espionage and Attacks in Cyberspace
Aaron F. Brantly (U.S. Military Academy, West Point)
Fighting the Networks: From Computer Security to Cybersecurity and Beyond
Michael Warner (US Department of Defense)
Intelligence and Legitimacy in the Digital Age
Emily Goldman (Department of Defense)
Treachery in Historical Perspective: Comparing Cyber-spy Edward Snowden and the Cambridge Five
David Gioe (U.S. Military Academy, West Point)
TB41: Thursday 10:30 AM - 12:15 PM
Foreign Policy Making: Drivers and Constraints
Chair Anat Niv-Solomon (City University of New York)
Disc. Kai Oppermann (University of Sussex)
Territory, emotion, and foreign policy in the 21st century
Jarrod Hayes (Georgia Institute of Technology)
Federalizing Security: Provincial Security Policy in Canada
Allan Craigie (University of British Columbia)
Exploring, Expanding, and Expressing Poliheuristic Theory
Tony Rivera and Steve Grewell (National Defense University)
The Interplay of Constitutional and Political Restrictions on the Use of Force: Introducing a New Conce
ptual Framework
Patrick A. Mello (Technische Universitt Dresden)
A Theory of Covert Action
Loch K. Johnson (University of Georgia)
TB43: Thursday 10:30 AM -12:15 PM
Intelligence and Democracy: Case Studies from Three Continents
Chair Cris Matei (Naval Postgraduate School)
Disc. Mark Phythian (University of Leicester) & Joe Wippl (Boston University)
Intelligence in Brazil
Thomas C. Bruneau (Naval Postgraduate School)
Intelligence in Sri Lanka and Indonesia
Timothy J. Doorey (Naval Postgraduate School)
Intelligence in Poland
Stephane J. Lefebvre (Carleton University)
Intelligence in Colombia and Peru
William C. Spracher (National Intelligence University)
Kosovo: An International Intelligence Playground?
Peter Gill (University of Liverpool)

Intelligence Studies Panels at ISA 2015


18-21 February 2015 in New Orleans, LA
TC14: Thursday 1:45 PM - 3:30 PM
Intelligence and Technology
Chair Dr. Patrick F. Walsh (Charles Sturt University)
Disc. Glenn Hastedt (James Madison University)
I, Spy Robot: The Ethics of Robots in National Intelligence Activities
Shannon Ford (Australian Graduate School of Policing and Security, Charles Sturt University)
Non-Kinetic Solutions: Using UAVs to Combat Animal Poaching
Whitney Grespin (Sloan Manor)
Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) Developing
Effective Collection Strategies in Support of Humanitarian Relief Operations
Brian Powers (National Intelligence University)
Military Robots and Emotion: Challenges for Just War Theory
Jai Galliott (Macquarie University)
TC51: Thursday 1:45 PM - 3:30 PM
Why are Some States Better than Others at Calculating Threat?
Chair Stephen G. Walker (Arizona State University)
Disc. Joshua Rovner (Southern Methodist University)
Leaders and their Experts: Understanding the Domestic Determinants of State Threat Assessment
Julia M. Macdonald (George Washington University)
Measuring Intelligence Effectiveness
Jacquelyn Schneider (George Washington University)
The Determinants of Uncertainty in International Relations
Jeff Kaplow and Erik Gartzke (University of California San Diego)
The Changing American Way of Intelligence
Erik Dahl (Naval Postgraduate School)
Interpretive Bias and its Effect(s) on the Perception of the Threat of Proliferation-Related Behavior
Todd Clayton Robinson (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
TD37: Thursday 4:00 PM - 5:45 PM
Intelligence, Analysis, and Outreach: Love-Hate Relationship
Chair Roger Z. George (National Defense University)
Disc. Susan Nelson (Bureau of Intelligence and Research, US Department of State)
Part. Jean-Louis Tiernan (Government of Canada)
TD45: Thursday 4:00 PM - 5:45 PM
Issues in Intelligence Analysis Tradecraft and Education
Chair Ruben Arcos (Rey Juan Carlos University, Madrid (Spain))
Disc. Daniel S. Gressang (US Department of Defense)
Methodological Contributions of the Humanities and Social Sciences to Political Risk Analysis
Doron Zimmermann (Swissgrid ag) and Anne Mariel Zimmermann (UBS Wolfsberg)
Structured analytical techniques in international intelligence vs national intelligence
Mihaela Matei (EU INTCEN)
Designing an Intelligence Education & Training Simulation Center for Virtual Regional Worlds
Marian Sebe (National Intelligence Academy)
Failure to Launch: Analyzing the Emergence of Post-9/11 Intelligence Degree Programs
Matthew D. Crosston (Bellevue University) & Stephen Coulthart (University of Pittsburgh)
How Do We Know?: What Intelligence Analysis Can Learn from The Sociology of Science
Jeffrey Tang (James Madison University)
EVENING EVENT: Pherson Associates Reception

Intelligence Studies Panels at ISA 2015


18-21 February 2015 in New Orleans, LA
FRIDAY 20 FEBRUARY 2015
FA15: Friday 8:15 AM - 10:00 AM
Human Intelligence: Spies, Bureaucrats, and Anthropologists
Chair: Stephen M. Grenier (Johns Hopkins University)
Disc: David Strachan-Morris (University of Leicester)
Stubborn in pursuit of the path they have chosen: The USMC, the CIA, and the failure of management
reform Rebecca Jensen (CMSS) and Brice Coates (University of Calgary)
"Human Terrain" and the Application of Social Science to Intelligence
Terry C. Quist (U.S. Army)
Doubles Troubles: Why the CIA Recruited Double Agents during the Cold War
Benjamin Fischer (Retired) U.S. Government
Conflict Assessment Practices and Bureaucratic Barriers to Adaptation for Irregular Warfare and
Stabilization Missions
Nathan White (King's College London)
Controlling Covert Operations: Organizational Issues in the Restructuring of the CIAs Clandestine
Service
Brice Coates (University of Calgary)
FA72: Friday 8:15 AM - 10:00 AM
Intelligence Oversight, Management, and Reform
Chair William J. Lahneman (Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University)
Disc. Peter Gill (University of Liverpool)
Is the ODNI Really Improving U.S. Intelligence Analysis?
John A. Gentry (National Intelligence University)
Intelligence & Intelligence Reform: What Incentives for Policy Makers?
Cris Matei (Naval Postgraduate School)
Behind Closed Doors: The Question of Intelligence Oversight in the United Kingdom
Melina Dobson (University of Warwick)
Failures of Accountability and Oversight: Canadas Handling of the Afghan Detainee Affair:
Stuart Farson (Simon Fraser University)
Authority and Information Flow in National Intelligence Systems: a comparative approach
Marco A. C. Cepik and Gustavo Moller (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul)
Congressional Oversight of Intelligence: The United States Experience
Frederick M. Kaiser and Elaine Halchin (Congressional Research Service)
FB39: Friday 10:30 AM - 12:15 PM
Global Perspectives on Strategic Foresight Analysis
Chair Randy Pherson (Pherson Associates)
Disc. Julian J. Richards (University of Buckingham)
Operational Decision Elaboration as a Foresight Method: A Corporate Approach
Pierre Memheld (Political Sciences School Aix en Provence Institut d'Etudes Politiques Aix en Provence)
Knowledge, Foreknowledge, and Anticipation in the Domain of Communication: Intelligence for Commu
nication Strategy Formulation and Decision Support
Ruben Arcos (Rey Juan Carlos University, Madrid (Spain))
Using Foresight Techniques to Anticipate the Unanticipated
Randy Pherson (Pherson Associates)
Blending Foresight Techniques with the Estimative-warning Intelligence Function for Improved Strategic
Risk Management
Brett Peppler (Macquarie University)

Intelligence Studies Panels at ISA 2015


18-21 February 2015 in New Orleans, LA
FB48: Friday 10:30 AM - 12:15 PM
Leadership in the World of Intelligence: Regional Approaches and General Patterns
Chair and Disc. Mark Phythian (University of Leicester)
The Security Chiefs of the Soviet Bloc, 1917-1991
Paul Maddrell (Loughborough University)
"The Eye of the Egyptian Intelligence Does Not Sleep"
Dina Rezk (University of Warwick)
GCHQ Leaders and the Cult of Management
Richard James Aldrich (University of Warwick)
From Richard Helms to William Casey: DCIs during the "Long Time
of Troubles" - Leaders, Managers, Believers
Andrew Hammond (University of Warwick)
Regional Intelligence Cooperation: Problems and Prospects
Lawrence Cline (Center for Civil Military Relations)
FB57: Friday 10:30 AM - 12:15 PM
Health Security and Intelligence
Chair Owain D. Williams (University of Queensland)
Chair Rebecca J. Hester (University of Texas Medical Branch)
Antibiotic Resistant Infections: The Next Global Health Security Threat?
Robert L. Ostergard (University of Nevada, Reno)
The Political Economy of Health and Security: or how health and security became functional to
capitalism
Rebecca J. Hester (University of Texas Medical Branch) and Owain D. Williams (University of
Queensland)
Global Health as an Intelligence and National Security Issue
Luigi Martino (University of Florence)
Building Biosecurity through Oversight: Lessons Learned from the United States and Australia
Adam Kamradt-Scott (University of Sydney) and Frank L. Smith (The University of Sydney)
The elephant in the room: Where are noncommunicable diseases in the global health security agenda?
Susan Bridle-Fitzpatrick (Tulane University)
LUNCHTIME EVENT: Intelligence Studies Section Business Meeting: Friday 12:30-1:30PM
FC15: Friday 1:45 PM - 3:30 PM
Intelligence and Non-State Threats
Chair David M. Barrett (Villanova University)
Disc. Roger Z. George (National Defense University)
Partisans, Hybrids, and Intelligence
Lawrence Cline (Center for Civil Military Relations)
CBRN terrorism and intelligence: fear, foresight and threat assessments
Jeremy Littlewood (Carleton University)
New Means to an End? The Changing Nature of Terrorist Communications
Daniel S. Gressang (US Department of Defense)
Intelligence, Hyper-Terrorism and Organized Crime: An Unhappy Love Story
Claudia Hofmann (School of International Service, American University)
Genevieve Lester (Georgetown University)
EPIC fusing intelligence to counter narcotics since 1974
Damien Van Puyvelde (The University of Texas at El Paso)

Intelligence Studies Panels at ISA 2015


18-21 February 2015 in New Orleans, LA
FD49: Friday 4:00 PM - 5:45 PM
National Security and Intelligence in a Big Data Age: Innovation, Ethics, and Legitimacy
Chair Andrej J. Zwitter (University of Groningen)
Disc. Anno Bunnik (Liverpool Hope University, Centre for Applied Research in Security Innovation)
Needles in Haystacks: Law, Capability, Ethics and Proportionality in Big Data Intelligence-Gathering
Julian J. Richards (University of Buckingham)
Reducing the Information Sharing Pathologies of Intelligence-Led Policing
Ian P. Stanier (London Metropolitan University)
Beyond Cyber: Rethinking Security Governance in a Digital Age
Anno Bunnik (Liverpool Hope University, Centre for Applied Research in Security Innovation)
Unlocking Big Data for Predictive Policy Analysis and Strategic Intelligence
Michael Mulqueen (Liverpool Hope University) and Andrej J. Zwitter (University of Groningen)
A Quiet Revolution: Professionalisation of Intelligence Analysis in Law Enforcement in the UK
Tracy Holyer (Durham Constabulary)
EVENING EVENT: Intelligence Studies Section Business Meeting: Part 2
SATURDAY 21 FEBRUARY 2015
SA55: Saturday 8:15 AM - 10:00 AM
Global Health and Intelligence
Chair Damien Van Puyvelde (The University of Texas at El Paso)
Disc. Stefan H. Elbe (University of Sussex) and Stephen Marrin (James Madison University)
Improving How to Think in Intelligence Analysis and Medicine
Efren Torres (Brunel University) and Stephen Marrin (James Madison University)
Cognitive and Organisational Elements of Knowledge Transfer From Medical Diagnosis To Intelligence
Analysis
M. H. Gaballa (University College London UCL)
Managing Emerging Health Security Threats Since 9/11: The Role of Intelligence
Patrick F. Walsh (Charles Sturt University)
Pain as Agency: The Conflation of Medical Practitioners and Torturers
Sarah Naumes (York University)
Health, Privacy and (Information) Security: Competing Discourses in
eHealth Programmes and Genome Data Regulations
Peter Johansson and Sofie Hellberg (University of Gothenburg)
SB25: Saturday 10:30 AM - 12:15 PM
Cognitive and Psychological Approaches of Foreign Policy Decision Making
Chair Baris Kesgin (Susquehanna University) & Disc. Thomas Preston (Washington State University)
Removing the Individual from the Error Term: The Impact of Individual Differences on Causal Attributio
ns in an Incentivized Bargaining Game
Mark Paradis and Rod Albuyeh (University of Southern California)
Leadership Psychology and the Use of Sanctions
Gary Smith (University of Central Florida )
How Leaders Perceive Tragedy: Psycho-Trauma as Neglected Factor in Foreign Policy Decision Making
Alexander Niedermeier and Wolfram Ridder (FAU Erlangen-Nuremberg)
Framing Acts, Outcomes, and Contingencies in the Intelligence Process
William A. Boettcher and Michael Cobb (North Carolina State University)
When Do Presidents Learn? Foreign Policy Process Learning and
Failure in the First Year of the Kennedy Administration
Rebecca Lissner (Friedman) (Georgetown University)

Intelligence Studies Panels at ISA 2015


18-21 February 2015 in New Orleans, LA
SB55: Saturday 10:30 AM - 12:15 PM
Snowden, Big Data, and Intelligence
Chair John A. Gentry (National Intelligence University)
Disc. William J. Lahneman (Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University)
Explaining Security Leaks: A New Framework for Analysis
Mary Manjikian (Regent University)
Rethinking Security Intelligence Collection Policies and Practice Post 9/11/Post Snowden
Patrick F. Walsh and Seumas Miller (Charles Sturt University)
The Press and NSA Leaks: The Dynamics of Agenda Setting and Policy Reform
Glenn Hastedt (James Madison University)
Big Data, Data Mining, and the Intelligence Community
William J. Lahneman (Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University)
SC74: Saturday 1:45 PM - 3:30 PM
Intelligence -- the Cyber Dimension
Chair Robert M. Farley (University of Kentucky)
Disc. Andrea Calderaro (European University Institute)
The 5 Architectures of Intelligence: Holistic Framework to Support Cybersecurity and Defense
Sean Costigan (The New School)
The Brazilian policy, strategy and legislation concerning intelligence in cyberspace
Denilson Feitoza Pacheco and Jussara Machado (INASIS
International Association for Security and Intelligence Studies)
Subverting reality: The role of propaganda in 21st century intelligence.
Nataliya Brantly (University of Maryland) and Aaron Brantly (US Military Academy, West Point)
Developing Revolution in Military Affairs analytical framework for refined understanding of cyber securi
ty
Lior Tabansky (Tel Aviv University)
Intellectual Property, Cyberespionage, and Military Diffusion
Robert M. Farley and Davida Isaacs (University of Kentucky)
No man's land of Cyberspace: The Darknet and States
Louise Marie Hurel (PUC-Rio)
SD19: Saturday 4:00 PM - 5:45 PM
New Perspectives on Strategic Communication
Chair: Ryan Grauer (University of Pittsburgh)
Disc. Danielle L. Lupton (Colgate University)
Towards a Comprehensive Theory of Costly Signals: Symbolic
Gestures, Benign Intent, and Conflict Transformation
Kai R. Hebel (University of Oxford)
Clandestine Communication: Signals and Inferences in the Covert Sphere
Austin M. Carson and Keren Milo (Princeton University
Strength in Signals: Tying Hands and Sunk Costs in Military Coercion
Abigail Post (University of Virginia)
By Hook or By Crook: Gossip, Intelligence Sharing, & Wartime Deception against Sideline States
Jonathan N. Brown (Sam Houston State University)
Alex Farrington (Central Michigan University)
Apology as Signaling: Why Japan does not apologize for its past like Germany?
Taisuke Fujita (Nagasaki University, Japan)
Hiroki Kusano (Saitama U)

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Intelligence Studies Panels at ISA 2015


18-21 February 2015 in New Orleans, LA
SD59: Saturday 4:00 PM - 5:45 PM
Intelligence and Theory
Chair Loch K. Johnson (University of Georgia)
Disc. David Strachan-Morris (University of Leicester)
Structural Influences on the Relationship Between Policymakers and
Intelligence Providers: A Comparison of the United States and the United Kingdom
Larry Lamanna (Independent Researcher)
Political Risk; What Can it Offer the Study of Intelligence?
David Strachan-Morris (University of Leicester)
Essence of Non-Decision: Employing Three Theories to Explain CIA's Deferral of Decision on Declassifi
cation of JFK-era Documents
David M. Barrett (Villanova University)
Toward a Theory of Non-State Actors Intelligence
John A. Gentry (National Intelligence University)

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