Worth a Look: Book Reviews on Dereliction of Duty (Other Than Defense)

00 Remixed Review Lists, 09 Justice, Congress (Failure, Reform), Corruption, Corruption, Corruption, Executive (Partisan Failure, Reform), Worth A Look

Dereliction of Duty Other Than Defense)

Review (Guest): Integrity–Good People, Bad Choices, and Life Lessons from the White House

Review: A Season of Inquiry–The Senate Intelligence Investigation

Review: Afghanistan’s Endless War–State Failure, Regional Politics, and the Rise of the Taliban

Review: America the Vulnerable–How Our Government Is Failing to Protect Us from Terrorism

Review: Betrayal of Trust–The Collapse of Global Public Health

Review: Blue Frontier–Dispatches from America’s Ocean Wilderness

Review: Bureaucratic Politics and Foreign Policy

Review: Collapse–How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed

Review: Collapse–How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed

Review: Defense Facts of Life–The Plans/Reality Mismatch

Review: Downsizing Democracy–How America Sidelined Its Citizens and Privatized Its Public

Review: Genocide in the Congo (Zaire)

Review: Gomorrah

Review: Inside Sudan–Political Islam, Conflict, and Catastrophe

Review: Leave Us Alone–Getting the Government’s Hands Off Our Money, Our Guns, Our Lives

Review: My Year in Iraq–The Struggle to Build a Future of Hope

Review: Politics Lost–How American Democracy Was Trivialized By People Who Think You’re Stupid (Hardcover)

Review: Risk and Reason–Safety, Law, and the Environment

Review: Running on Empty–How the Democratic and Republican Parties Are Bankrupting Our Future and What Americans Can Do About It (Paperback)

Review: Running The World–the Inside Story of the National Security Council and the Architects of American Power (Hardcover)

Review: See No Evil–The True Story of a Ground Soldier in the CIA’s War on Terrorism

Review: Seven Sins of American Foreign Policy (Paperback)

Review: Shake Hands With The Devil–The Failure Of Humanity In Rwanda

Review: The Assault on Reason

Review: The Collapse of Complex Societies

Review: The Edge of Disaster–Rebuilding a Resilient Nation

Review: The Life and Death of NSSM 200 –How the Destruction of Political Will Doomed a U.S. Population Policy

Review: The New American Story

Review: The Next Catastrophe–Reducing Our Vulnerabilities to Natural, Industrial, and Terrorist Disasters

Review: The Political Junkie Handbook (The Definitive Reference Book on Politics)

Review: Where Have All the Leaders Gone?

Review: While America Sleeps–How Islam, Immigration and Indoctrination Are Destroying America From Within

Review: White Nile, Black Blood–War, Leadership, and Ethnicity from Khartoum to Kampala

Review: Wilson’s Ghost–Reducing the Risk of Conflict, Killing, and Catastrophe in the 21st Century

Review: Your Government Failed You–Breaking the Cycle of National Security Disasters

Graphic: United Nations (UN) & Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) Intelligence Tribe (8 of 8)

Tribes
UN-NGO Tribe
UN-NGO Tribe

This tribe includes all the non-profit organizations but is distinguished from civil society by its structure and orientation.  This tribe now vastly outnumbers all the other tribes combined on the battlefield and across the arena of hybird operations.  It's intelligence or decision-support capabilities are severely deficient at the same time that it represents an extraordinary opportunity to harness vast time-energy resources including contributed funds and contributed goods as well as contributed labor.

NOTE:  Commentator is clearly experienced.  We have grouped all of these because the discipline of public intelligence is just emergent now.  In the future each of the eight tribes should self-determine useful distinctions such as those below elevated from the Comment to the main page:

+ International Organizations (IO) have specific roles in international law.

+ Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO) are chartered by different countries, some have observer status and some do not, depending on the specific domain.

+ Within UN Mission Areas (e.g. Peacekeeping)  there are different cultures and capabilities from humanitarian workers and human rights workers.

Graphic: Military Intelligence Tribe (7 of 8)

Tribes
Military Tribe
Military Tribe

The military is the most important of the eight intelligence tribes for the simple reason that it is the only tribe with a modicum of cohesion in every country, and hence is can serve as both a hub for the other seven tribes within its parent country, and as a reachback hub for a global network of multinational information-sharing and sense-making hubs that are the foundation for the World Brain and EarthGame, with the intermediate objectives of

1.  Getting a grip on all information in all languages all the time; and

2.  Providing unclassified decision support to the United Nations and all organizations concerned with stabiliztion & reconstruction, humanitarian assistance, and disaster relief operations.

Graphic: Media Intelligence Tribe (5 of 8)

Tribes
Media Tribe
Media Tribe

The media tribes includes all forms of structured and unstructured reporting, including state-sponsored broadcast organizations such as the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), and citizen-journalism including Blogs.

The media tribe is of special interest because 90% of what a typical journalist knows or records does not get formally published due to varied constraints including word counts, legal caution, and source protection.  There are some substantial opportunities within this community once a combination of aggregate anonymous data mining and trusted sharing protocols can be made publicly available.

Graphic: Law Enforcement Intelligence (4 of 8)

Tribes
Law Enforcement Tribe
Law Enforcement Tribe

Law Enforcement, like secret Government intelligence, is an inherent responsibility of government and we do not support the use of contractors in fulfilling this function.  Private Investigators and all forms of out-sourced contracting for intelligence collection, processing, and analysis are placed within the Commerce tribe.

Graphic: Government Intelligence Tribe (3 of 8)

Tribes
Government Tribe
Government Tribe

The government intelligence tribe is much much larger than just the secret national intelligence element.  Govenrment is a beneficiary–a consumer–of open source information–rather than a primary generator.  There are some very positive trends toward assuring that all information paid for by the taxpayer are placed in the public domain in digital form, and some governments, such as those of China and Norway, have made the logical connection between Free/Open Source Software (F/OSS) and public intelligence or information–citizens should not have to purchase proprietary software or licenses in order to view and exploit government-provided information they funded in the first place.  State and local governments are also becoming much more important as real-time science and full-spectrum budget harmonization come into play.