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Redefining national security to include non-military and domestic issues, as a consequence of the end of the Cold War impacted significantly on the state-sponsored intelligence practice.
The deployment of domestic civilian intelligence services has, in the absence major form of violence such as insurgencies, created a dilemma for states.
Reports of human violations by domestic intelligence services represent a direct assault on the democratic fabric of states.
Problems of information-sharing and co-ordination, and turf wars continue to produce intelligence failures.This work draws on the experience of South Africa’s National Intelligence Agency (NIA) and the United Kingdom’s Security Service (MI5).
This book serves as a useful tool for students, academics, policy-makers and human rights groups as we all grapple with positioning our domestic civilian intelligence services for the 21st century security challenges.
From this analysis springs a new school of thought premised upon the conviction that in the absence of an insurgency, a domestic civilian intelligence service should neither be readily established nor retained, or else its mandate should be narrowly defined.
Shadrack Chiloane, Master of Security Studies (MSS): Studied Security Studies at the University of Pretoria.
Security Consultant and Researcher for Maure Consultancy, Pretoria (South Africa).
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