Title: Analyzing intelligence : origins, obstacles, and innovations
Abstract: PrefaceIntroduction: Intelligence Analysis -- The Emergence of a DisciplineJames B. Bruce and Roger Z. George Part One: The Analytic Tradition 1. The Evolution of Intelligence AnalysisJohn H. Hedley 2. The Track Record: CIA Analysis from 1950-2000Richard J. Kerr 3. Is Intelligence Analysis a Discipline?Rebecca Fisher and Rob Johnston Part Two: The Policy--Analyst Relationship 4. Serving the National PolicymakerJohn McLaughlin 5. The Policymaker's Perspective: Transparency and PartnershipJames B. Steinberg 6. Intelligence Analysis: Between Politicization and IrrelevanceGregory F. Treverton Part Three: Enduring Challenges 7. The Art of Strategy and IntelligenceRoger Z. George 8. Foreign Denial and Deception: Analytical ImperativesJames B. Bruce and Michael Bennett 9. U.S. Military Intelligence Analysis: Old and New ChallengesDavid Thomas Part Four: Diagnosis and Prescription 10. Why Bad Things Happen to Good AnalystsJack Davis 11. Making Analysis More Reliable: Why Epistemology Matters to IntelligenceJames B. Bruce 12. The Missing Link: The Analyst-Collector RelationshipJames B. Bruce Part Five: Leading Analytic Change 13. Managing Analysis in the Information AgeJohn C. Gannon 14. Intelligence in Transition: Analysis after September 11 and IraqMark M. Lowenthal 15. The New AnalysisCarmen A. Medina Part Six: New Frontiers of Analysis 16. Computer-Aided Analysis of Competing HypothesesRichards J. Heuer Jr. 17. Predictive Warning: Teams, Networks, and Scientific MethodTimothy J. Smith 18. Homeland Security Intelligence: Rationale, Requirements, and Current StatusBruce Berkowitz Conclusion: The Age of Analysis Roger Z. George and James B. Bruce Glossary of Analytic TermsContributorsIndex
Publication Year: 2008
Publication Date: 2008-01-01
Language: en
Type: book
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 115
AI Researcher Chatbot
Get quick answers to your questions about the article from our AI researcher chatbot