Routledge Handbook of Media and Intelligence
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Product details
- ISBN 9781032678832
- Weight: 1040g
- Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
- Publication Date: 24 Mar 2026
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
This handbook examines media portrayals of intelligence institutions, cultures, and conduct in various political regimes, showing how they inflect and reflect public views of the intelligence community.
Specifically, this volume assesses how popular media portrayals of intelligence agencies influence such realms as public perception, opinion, and support of intelligence; recruitment endeavours; democratic transformation of intelligence services; transparency versus secrecy; outreach and messaging efforts; and intelligence interagency sharing, cooperation, and collaboration, both domestically and internationally. The book chapters are divided into three thematic sections:
Section I: Theoretical Concepts
Section II: Case Studies of Non-Democratic or Nominally Democratic Regimes
Section III: Case Studies of Consolidated and Consolidating Democracies
The volume also looks toward newer and emerging media around the world to explore ways in which both the intelligence sector and its image in media and popular culture may be changing.
Filling a clear gap in the literature, this book will be of much interest to students of intelligence studies, media and communication studies, national security, and international relations.
Florina Cristiana Matei is a senior lecturer at the Center for Homeland Defense and Security, Naval Postgraduate School, California. She is the co-editor (with Thomas Bruneau) of The Routledge Handbook of Civil-Military Relations (2012, 2021); (with Halladay) of The Conduct of Intelligence in Democracies: Processes, Practices, Cultures (2019); and (with Halladay and Estevez) of The Handbook of Latin American and Caribbean Intelligence Cultures (2022).
Carolyn Halladay is a historian and a lawyer, who serves as a senior lecturer and academic associate at the Center for Homeland Defense and Security, Naval Postgraduate School, California.
