Routledge, 2021. — 217 p.
This book, first published in 1991, examines the changes to security and intelligence agencies envisioned in the uncertain world at the end of the Cold War. While the central focus is on the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, its history, function and future, there are also comparative studies of the British, Soviet, American and Australian systems.
Editors’ Preface.
Acknowledgements.
International Perspectives on Intelligence.
Wesley K. Wark. Introduction: The Fin-de-siècle Phenomenon.
Christopher Andrew. The British View of Security and Intelligence.
John J. Dziak. The Soviet System of Security and Intelligence.
Loch K. Johnson. Strategic Intelligence: An American Perspective.
Peter Gill. Canadian and Comparative Perspectives. The Evolution of the Security Intelligence Debate in Canada since 1976.
John Starnes. Review versus Oversight.
Frank Cain. Accountability and the Australian Security Intelligence Organization: A Brief History.
Reg Whitaker The Canadian Security and Intelligence System: Fighting the Last War or the Next?
Franklyn Griffiths. The CSIS, Gorbachev and Global Change: Canada’s Internal Security and Intelligence Requirements in Transition.
Robert Jervis. Strategic Intelligence and Effective Policy.
Jean-Paul Brodeur. Countering Terrorism in Canada.
Notes on the Contributors.