RESULTS: Understanding and Improving Intelligence Analysis
- BCISS Conference Materials: Understanding and Improving Intelligence Analysis
- Computer Forensic Reforms (Robinson)
- Current Intelligence Reporting and the H5N1 Virus (Vogel)
- Bayesian Analysis and Social Sciences (Paladini)
- Intelligence and Journalism—FDNY Watchline (Newman)
- Seeing Is Not Believing (Lawhead)
- Judging Intelligence Success and Failure (Kringen)
- Futures Research and Intelligence (Jensen)
- History and Intelligence Analysis (Graves)
- The Unreliable Memoirs of an Applied Historian (Gardner)
- The Unreliable Memoirs of an Applied Historian 2.0 (Gardner)
- Measuring Intelligence Success Conceptual and Methodological Challenges (Gainor)
- Putting Decision Science into the Art of Intelligence Analysis (Dhami)
- Seekers After Truth (Clarke)
- Intelligence Analysis and Professional Journal Publishing (Cain)
- Intelligence Reporting—What Works What Doesnt and How to Fix It (Bernhardt)
- Intelligence Reporting (Bernhardt)
- Political Marketing Intelligence (Sebe)
BCISS Forum on Intelligence Analysis–January 2012
Dr. Stephen Marrin
Centre for Intelligence and Security Studies
Department of Politics and History
Brunel University
Uxbridge (West London), England
stephen.marrin@brunel.ac.uk
http://www.brunel.ac.uk/sss/
Phi Beta Iota: As anticipated, nothing really original here. As not anticipated, there is nothing at all from any other discipline. The point that intelligence theory and practice today is retarded, and that all of the other disciplines are themselves fragmented into incoherence, appears to have escaped the organizers.
See Also:
Graphic: Fragmented Knowledge to World Brain 4.0