Anda di halaman 1dari 7

Intelligence Studies Section Panels at ISA 2014 26-29 March 2014 in Toronto, Canada

See below for the program of the Intelligence Studies Section (ISS) at the annual International Studies Association (ISA) conference taking place 26-29 March 2014 in Toronto, Canada. 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...19 panels) is one small part of ISAs much larger conference. The full conference program is 264 pages; find details at the full conference website here: http://www.isanet.org/Conferences/Toronto2014.aspx 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 ISAT/Intelligence Analysis James Madison University http://www.isat.jmu.edu/people/marrin.html -------------------------------------------WA21: Wednesday 8:15 AM - 10:00 AM Experiencing Analytic Tradecraft: Simulations for Education and Training in Intelligence Analysis Chair William J. Lahneman (EmbryRiddle Aeronautical University) Disc. Ruben Arcos (King Juan Carlos University, Madrid (Spain)) TEST Simulation Model: Team Working and Experimental Scenario-based Training Chris Jagger & Julian J. Richards (University of Buckingham) Spies and Lies: The Perils of Collection (A Simulation) James Breckenridge & Kristan J. Wheaton (Mercyhurst College) Why Senior Policymakers Value Simulations and Table top Exercises Randy Pherson (Pherson Associates) Presenting Intelligence Analysts with Ethical Scenarios Fernando Velasco Falling short of learning our lessons: Insights from psychology into why we are (fairly) good at identifying, but not learning, our lessons. Sarah Hill WB39: Wednesday 10:30 AM - 12:15 PM Covert Action and Intelligence Chair Erik Dahl (Naval Postgraduate School) Disc. Peter Gill (University of Liverpool) The Enduring Myths of Covert Action Loch K. Johnson (University of Georgia) The Future of American Espionage Joe Wippl (Boston University) Soft Spying: Leveraging Globalization as Proxy Military Rivalry Matthew D. Crosston (Bellevue University) The Special Reconnaissance Unit and the Origins of Clandestine HUMINT in Northern Ireland David Anderson Charters (University of New Brunswick) Intelligence agencies and the use of lethal force Shannon Ford (Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics, Charles Sturt University)

Intelligence Studies Section Panels at ISA 2014 26-29 March 2014 in Toronto, Canada
WB73: Wednesday 10:30 AM - 12:15 PM (International) Political Risk: Bridging the Gap between Scholars and Practitioners Chair Raffaele Marchetti (LUISS Guido Carli University) Disc. Raphal Gellert (Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB)) Political risk analysis and the theories of globalization: bridging the gap with a new conceptual model Raffaele Marchetti (LUISS Guido Carli University) Political risk or political risks: an empirical investigation on the effects of different types of political risks on economic and financial indicators of crisis countries Francesco Giumelli (University of Groningen) Bridging the gap between theory and practice? The Concept and Measurement of Political Risk in a Globalized World Cecilia Emma Sottilotta (LUISS Guido Carli) The Rise of Politics: Cognition and the Changing Importance of Political Variables to Financial Market Actors Lauren M. Phillips (London School of Economics and Political Science) Model, Methodology, and Forecast: Political Risk Over Time In Malaysia Llewellyn D. Howell (Thunderbird School of Global Management) WC29: Wednesday 1:45 PM - 3:30 PM Geosocial Intelligence for Deviant Globalization: Analyzing the Spaces and Places of Transnational Crime Chair John P. Sullivan (Los Angeles Sheriff's Department) Chair Robert J. Bunker (Strategic Studies Institute, US Army War College) Disc. Daniel S. Gressang (US Department of Defense) NarcoCities: Mexico and Beyond John P. Sullivan (Los Angeles Sheriff's Department) Challenges to the Intelligence Process in Violent Border Settings: A Study of Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez under the Calderon Administration Irina A. Chindea (Fletcher School, Tufts University) Illicit Network Alliances and Conflict within the Mexican Drug World Nathan Jones (Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy) Predictive Analytics and Criminal Insurgency: Understanding Factors Driving GeoLocation of Illicit Activity, Social Unrest, and Political Conflict Andrew Trabulsi Reassessing the LoneWolf Phenomena Orlandrew Danzell (Mercyhurst University) WD40: Wednesday 4:00 PM - 5:45 PM Improving Intelligence Analysts Understanding of International Actors and Outcomes through Social Sciences and History Chair and Disc. Stephen Marrin (James Madison University) Intelligence Analysis and Social Science Methods: Exploring the Potential and Explaining the Limits of Mutual Learning Mark Phythian (University of Leicester) Intelligence Analysis and HistoryHistory and Analysis: A Search for Common Goals and Standards Michael Warner (US Department of Defense) Culture as constraint: Intelligence analysis, organizations and social learning Richard James Aldrich (University of Warwick) Intelligence Analysis and Philosophy Terry C. Quist (U.S. Army) 2

Intelligence Studies Section Panels at ISA 2014 26-29 March 2014 in Toronto, Canada
TA22: Thursday 8:15 AM - 10:00 AM Intelligence in a Globalized World Chair Greg Fyffe Disc. Richard James Aldrich (University of Warwick) Cooperation, complexity and change: Canadian intelligence and the globalized security environment Jeremy Littlewood (Carleton University) The Other Ties that Bind: Accountability, Legal Regimes and Security practices for Signals Intelligence Agencies in the Five Eyes intelligence alliance Wesley Wark (University of Ottawa) A Place at the Table: Canada, Australia, and New Zealand in the Five Eyes Intelligence Network. Andrew Brunatti (Brunel University) On Guard for Thee? The Dilemmas and Realities of Border Security in Canada Arne Kislenko TB29: Thursday 10:30 AM - 12:15 PM How Can Strategic Analysis Best Support Decision-making in Government? Chair Thomas A. Juneau (Government of Canada) Part. JeanFrancois Morel (Department of National Defence) Part. Colin H. Kahl (Georgetown University) Part. JeanLouis Tiernan (Government of Canada) Part. Ward PD Elcock Part. Rachel Ziemba (RGE Monitor) TC28: Thursday 1:45 PM - 3:30 PM Understanding American Intelligence: From Strategic Culture to Intelligence Culture Chair and Disc. Thomas G. Mahnken (U.S. Naval War College) The Roots of American Intelligence Culture in World War I Mark Stout (Johns Hopkins University) Intelligence's Munichs: Pearl Harbor and American Intelligence Culture Lesley C. Copeland (Carleton University) Intelligence Culture and Intelligence Operations: A Case Study of the CIAs SovietEast European Division Benjamin Fischer (CIA, Retired) TD23: Thursday 4:00 PM - 5:45 PM Intelligence and Democracy Chair James J. Wirtz (Naval Postgraduate School) Disc. Mark Phythian (University of Leicester) Intelligence Education and New Democracies Cris Matei (Naval Postgraduate School) Why democratic control of intelligence is a chimera Peter Gill (University of Liverpool) Intelligence Studies and Geopolitics Sorin-Gabriel Sebe (Bucharest University) A Legal Framework for Brazilian Intelligence Operations a Comparative Study of Brazil, Canada, the United States, and Argentina Denilson Feitoza Pacheco (Faculty Membership) Congressional Oversight of the Intelligence Community (IC): Who Does What? Anne Daugherty Miles (National Intelligence University)

Intelligence Studies Section Panels at ISA 2014 26-29 March 2014 in Toronto, Canada
FA21: Friday 8:15 AM - 10:00 AM Big Intelligence Jobs for Small States Chair and Disc. Michael Andregg (University of St. Thomas) Small state intelligence dilemma: The struggle between common European threat perceptions and national priorities Olli J. Teirila (Finnish National Defence University) UN Intelligence: The Whole is Greater than the Sum of the Parts Walter H. Dorn (Canadian Forces College) Engaging Public Support and Awareness in Intelligence: The Demands and Challenges to Developing a Strong Intelligence Culture Irena Dumitru (National Intelligence Academy) Challenges of South Korean Intelligence and Nuclear Diplomacy: North Korea's Weapons Development and Achieving Nuclear Power Based Green Growth Sung Chull Kim (Seoul National University) Dealing with Securitocracies and the Art of Mediating Peace: A Small Country's Perspective on Intelligence Lessons Learned Juha Pekka J. M. Makela (Finnish National Defense University) An Assessment of the Electromagnetic Pulse Weapon (EMP) and its Impact on Critical Electricity Infrastructure Doron Zimmermann (Swissgrid ag) FB43: Friday 10:30 AM - 12:15 PM Intelligence Machinery and Organizational Culture Chair Arthur Steven Hulnick (Boston University) Disc. Jon Rosenwasser (US Office of the Director of National Intelligence) Canada's Foreign Intelligence Needs: A Reappraisal Nancy Teeple & Stuart Farson (Simon Fraser University) A Framework for a Theory of Intelligence James S. Cox (Norman Paterson School of International Affairs, Carleton University) Intelligence Vectors as Seen from Varying National Perspectives: Ramifications for International Cooperation William C. Spracher (National Intelligence University, Booz Allen Hamilton, Inc.) Intelligence in a Time of Declining Resources Raymond Palumbo (U.S. Department of Defense) The Institutional Separation of Intelligence Gathering and Law Enforcement. Brice Coates & Carol-Ann Titus (University of Calgary) FC40: Friday 1:45 PM - 3:30 PM Historicizing ARGO: Intelligence, "Faction", and the "Canadian Caper." Chair SarahJane Corke (Dalhousie University) Part. Christopher R. Moran (Warwick University) Part. Mark Stout (Johns Hopkins University) Part. William Daugherty (Armstrong Atlantic State Univ) Part. Robert Wright (Trent University) Part. Drew Taylor Part. Ambassador Ken Taylor

Intelligence Studies Section Panels at ISA 2014 26-29 March 2014 in Toronto, Canada
FD01: Friday 4:00 PM - 5:45 PM Improving Intelligence Analysis: Best Practices from the Social Sciences and History Chair and Disc. Stephen Marrin (James Madison University) Getting beyond analysis by anecdote: improving intelligence analysis through the use of case studies Erik Dahl (Naval Postgraduate School) Applying Qualitative Social Research Designs and Methodologies to Improve Strategic Intelligence Practice Patrick F. Walsh (Charles Sturt University) Power of Data Mining in Social Science Context William J. Lahneman (Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University) One Step Back, Two Steps Forward: Using Structured Analysis to Better Understand and Address Human Trafficking Karen Saunders (Forum Foundation for Analytic Excellence) Data Management, Discovery and Fusion: Moving Analysis Upstream Jon Rosenwasser (US Office of the Director of National Intelligence) FD27: Friday 4:00 PM - 5:45 PM Perceptions and Representations: Surveillance, Intelligence, and the People Chair Claudia Hillebrand (Aberystwyth University) Disc. Christopher R. Moran (Warwick University) Recalibrating the Intelligence Media Relationship in Contemporary Germany Claudia Hillebrand (Aberystwyth University) Insults Rather Than Injures? Perceptions of the Surveillance State Ross Bellaby Perceptions of State and Radicalisation at Home \ Zoey Reeve Theorising the suspect community' Marie Breen-Smyth (University of Wales, Aberystwyth) Reflections in a wilderness of mirrors: Creating a framework for Ethical relationships between intelligence agencies and the news media Paul Lashmar SA40: Saturday 8:15 AM - 10:00 AM Reinventing Intelligence Production for the 21st Century Chair Ruben Arcos (King Juan Carlos University, Madrid (Spain)) Disc. Randy Pherson (Pherson Associates) Producing and Consuming Intelligence Products in the Digital Era: The Need for Multimedia Communication Manuel Gertrudix & Ruben Arcos (King Juan Carlos University, Madrid (Spain)) Moving from Paper to Wikis to Deliver Intelligence Analysis Randy Pherson (Pherson Associates) The 21st Century Intelligence Product: A Canadian Perspective John Pyrik Lessons Learned from the Corporate Environment for Presenting Intelligence in the 21st Century Jonathan Calof Computation and the Transformation of Producer/Consumer Relations Aaron B. Frank (LMI)

Intelligence Studies Section Panels at ISA 2014 26-29 March 2014 in Toronto, Canada
SB23: Saturday 10:30 AM - 12:15 PM Intelligence Beyond the Anglosphere Chair Julian J. Richards (University of Buckingham) Intelligence and the press in France: the case of the fadettes Damien Van Puyvelde (Aberystwyth University) Chinese intelligence , military and government independently, threat to security in East Asia Fei Wu (CHARHAR INSTITUTE and Ji Nan University ) Explaining Intelligence Trajectories: The Japanese Case Deirdre Quinn Martin (University of California, Berkeley) Taming the Rogue Elephant of the South: the new National Intelligence Policy and the challenges on intelligence oversight in Brazil Joanisval B. Goncalves (Senate of Brazil) Harmful Liaison: Western Intelligence and Middle Eastern Security Services Chikara Hashimoto (Aberystwyth University) SC26: Saturday 1:45 PM - 3:30 PM Intelligence Leaders in International Relations Chair Joe Wippl (Boston University) Disc. James J. Wirtz (Naval Postgraduate School) Li Kenong and the Practice of Chinese Intelligence Peter Mattis (Jamestown Foundation) Erich Mielke's Impact on the German Democratic Republic and the Soviet Bloc Paul Maddrell (Loughborough University) Jorge Noguera and the Demise of the Colombian DAS Zakia Shiraz (University of Warwick) Nixon's Man: CIA Director James Schlesinger Christopher R. Moran (Warwick University) The Intellectual Redneck: William Odom Richard James Aldrich (University of Warwick) SC27: Saturday 1:45 PM - 3:30 PM Transnational Challenges for Intelligence Practitioners: Insights from the European Borderlands Chair Valentin Filip (Romanian Intelligence Service / National Intelligence Academy) Disc. Michael Andregg (University of St. Thomas) International Migration and Brain Drain: The Impact of Population Loss on Romanian National Security Alina Paun (Romanian Intelligence Service) and Niculae Iancu (Romanian Domestic Intelligence Service (SRI)) Intelligence in Cyberspace. The Importance of Social Network Analysis. Tudor Rat (Open Source Center) Intelligence Analysis: Tradition vs. Antifragility Bogdan Prisecaru (National Intelligence Academy) Intelligence Diplomacy Smart Networking in a Complex World Costinel Anuta (National Intelligence Academy)

Intelligence Studies Section Panels at ISA 2014 26-29 March 2014 in Toronto, Canada
SD39: Saturday 4:00 PM - 5:45 PM Lessons from Intelligence History Chair Loch K. Johnson (University of Georgia) Disc. Michael Warner (US Department of Defense) Psychological intelligence and propaganda cycles: British and American anticommunist operations in early Cold War Southeast Asia Thomas Maguire (University of Cambridge (POLIS)) Intelligence and the Global Threats to British Rule in Palestine, 191939 Steven Wagner (University College, Oxford) The Great Gouzenko: Spies, Politics, and History Erik Jens (National Intelligence University) Canadas Forgotten Spies. Western Humint Cooperation in the Far East Don Munton (CASIS) and Miriam Matejova (University of British Columbia) Operation Blue Bat: Revisiting the 1958 American Intervention in Lebanon Jeffrey G. Karam (Brandeis University)

Anda mungkin juga menyukai