Conflict and Cooperation in Intelligence and Security Organisations

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A01=James Thomson
Author_James Thomson
Bounded Rationality Problem
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CIA
CIA's Counterterrorist Center
CIA’s Counterterrorist Center
Combatant Commands
CONTEST Strategy
cooperation
Counterterrorism Case
counterterrorism policy
Defence Intelligence
defence intelligence analysis
DIFC
DNI Post
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eq_society-politics
FISA
government coordination
Institutional Costs
Institutional Frictions
intelligence communities
Intelligence Community
intelligence cooperation frameworks
Intelligence Function
Intelligence Provision
Intelligence Spheres
interagency collaboration
Low Institutional Costs
national security
National Security Strategy
Negotiating Costs
ODNI
organisational architecture
political economy
public sector governance
SSCI
success and failure
transaction cost theory
UK Intelligence Community
UK's Method
UK's Military
UK’s Method
UK’s Military
Vice Versa
WMD Commission

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367619541
  • Weight: 400g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 May 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book provides an institutional costs framework for intelligence and security communities to examine the factors that can encourage or obstruct cooperation.

The governmental functions of security and intelligence require various organisations to interact in a symbiotic way. These organisations must constantly negotiate with each other to establish who should address which issue and with what resources. By coupling adapted versions of transaction costs theories with socio-political perspectives, this book provides a model to explain why some cooperative endeavours are successful, whilst others fail. This framework is applied to counterterrorism and defence intelligence in the UK and the US to demonstrate that the view of good cooperation in the former and poor cooperation in the latter is overly simplistic. Neither is necessarily more disposed to behave cooperatively than the other; rather, the institutional costs created by their respective organisational architectures incentivise different cooperative behaviour in different circumstances.

This book will be of much interest to students of intelligence studies, organisational studies, politics and security studies.

James Thomson has worked within the intelligence and security spheres for over 30 years, and he has received his PhD from Brunel University, UK.