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This book investigates everyday practices of intelligence
cooperation in anti-terrorism matters, with a specific focus on the
relationship between Europe and Britain. The volume examines the
effective involvement of British anti-terrorism efforts in European
cooperation arrangements, which until now have been overshadowed by
the UK-US 'special relationship' and by political debates that
overstate the divide between Britain and continental Europe. In
arguing that British intelligence has always had a European
dimension, it provides a distinct perspective to the study of
intelligence cooperation and the role of British intelligence
therein. Mobilizing a 'field theory' approach, the book provides an
original contribution to the understanding of intelligence
cooperation by investigating everyday bureaucratic practices of
'ground-level' security professionals and police forces, embedded
in a European 'field' structured around the exchange of anti-terror
intelligence. It also accounts for the drivers behind cooperation
by using 'field analysis,' which explains the trajectory and
positioning of actors according to their 'capitals' rather than
necessities dictated by threats or state decisions. This book will
be of much interest to students of Security Studies, International
Political Sociology, Intelligence Studies, and International
Relations in general.
This book investigates everyday practices of intelligence
cooperation in anti-terrorism matters, with a specific focus on the
relationship between Europe and Britain. The volume examines the
effective involvement of British anti-terrorism efforts in European
cooperation arrangements, which until now have been overshadowed by
the UK-US 'special relationship' and by political debates that
overstate the divide between Britain and continental Europe. In
arguing that British intelligence has always had a European
dimension, it provides a distinct perspective to the study of
intelligence cooperation and the role of British intelligence
therein. Mobilizing a 'field theory' approach, the book provides an
original contribution to the understanding of intelligence
cooperation by investigating everyday bureaucratic practices of
'ground-level' security professionals and police forces, embedded
in a European 'field' structured around the exchange of anti-terror
intelligence. It also accounts for the drivers behind cooperation
by using 'field analysis,' which explains the trajectory and
positioning of actors according to their 'capitals' rather than
necessities dictated by threats or state decisions. This book will
be of much interest to students of Security Studies, International
Political Sociology, Intelligence Studies, and International
Relations in general.
This book offers a new research agenda for intelligence studies in
contemporary times. In contrast to Intelligence Studies (IS), whose
aim has largely been to improve the performance of national
security services and assist in policy making, this book takes the
investigation of the new professionals and everyday practices of
intelligence as the immediate point of departure. Starting from the
observation that intelligence today is increasingly about
counter-terrorism, crime control, surveillance, and other
security-related issues, this book adopts a transdisciplinary
approach for studying the shifting logics of intelligence, how it
has come to involve an expanding number of empirical sites, such as
the police, local community, prison and the Internet, as well as a
corresponding multiplicity of new actors in these domains. Shifting
the focus away from traditional spies and Anglo-American
intelligence services, this book addresses the transformations of
contemporary intelligence through empirically detailed and
theoretically innovative analyses, making a key contribution to
existing scholarship. This book will be of much interest to
students of intelligence studies, critical security studies,
foreign policy, and International Relations.
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