The Handbook of Asian Intelligence Cultures


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Edited by Ryan Shaffer
Imprint:
ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
380

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Description

Ryan Shaffer is a historian with expertise on political violence and security. He has a PhD in history and has written for international magazines, including Readers Digest and Homeland Security Today, and his academic research has appeared in journals, such as Intelligence and National Security and the Journal of Intelligence History. His books include African Intelligence Services: Early Postcolonial and Contemporary Challenges and The Handbook of African Intelligence Cultures.


Acknowledgements



Introduction - Ryan Shaffer



Chapter 1: Afghanistan: The Graveyard of Intelligence Empires- Owen Sirrs



Chapter 2: Bangladesh: Intelligence Culture and Reform Priorities - ASM Ali Ashraf



Chapter 3: Bhutan: An Intelligence Culture amidst Regional Geopolitics - Praveen Kumar



Chapter 4: Brunei: A Royal Intelligence Culture - Ryan Shaffer



Chapter 5: Cambodia: Intelligence Mission—Regime Security - Paul Chambers



Chapter 6: China: The Fearful Intelligence Culture - Matthew Brazil



Chapter 7: India: Managing Challenges in an Evolving Security Environment - Sameer Patil and Arun Vishwanathan



Chapter 8: Indonesia: Intelligence Culture in Turbulent Times - Mark Briskey



Chapter 9: Japan: The Rise, Fall and Reinvention of the Intelligence Community - Richard J. Samuels



Chapter 10: Kazakhstan: A Circular Revolution in Intelligence Culture - Elizabeth Van Wie Davis



Chapter 11: Kyrgyzstan: Seeking Stability in a Complex Region - Réjeanne Lacroix



Chapter 12: Laos: Intelligence Culture with Internal Threats and External Actors - Hans Lipp



Chapter 13: Malaysia: Between Untenable Intelligence Tradition and Unrealized Reform - Scott Edwards



Chapter 14: Maldives: Connections Between Intelligence Culture and Oversight - Abdulla Phairoosch



Chapter 15: Mongolia: Democratization and Intelligence - Jargalsaikhan Mendee, Adiya Tuvshintugs and Julian Dierkes



Chapter 16: Myanmar: Security through Surveillance - Prem Mahadevan



Chapter 17: Nepal: A Developing Intelligence Culture - Bishnu Raj Upreti



Chapter 18: North Korea: An Agile and Adaptable National Intelligence System - Joseph Fitsanakis



Chapter 19: Pakistan: The Multidimensional Culture of the Inter-Services Intelligence - Nasir Mehmood



Chapter 20: The Philippines: Knowing, Hurting and Intelligence Culture - Amador IV Peleo



Chapter 21: Singapore: Developing Intelligence Power from Third World to First - Alexander Nicholas Shaw



Chapter 22: South Korea: The Outsize Influence of the National Intelligence Service - Charlie Lizza



Chapter 23: Sri Lanka: The Evolution of an Offensive Intelligence Culture - Rohan Gunaratna and Bodhana Perera



Chapter 24: Taiwan: An Intelligence Community in Constant Transformation - Hon-min Yau



Chapter 25: Tajikistan: Post-Soviet Intelligence Culture in a Fractured State - Michael Yerushalmi



Chapter 26: Thailand: From Cold War Intelligence to Cyber Surveillance - Michael Landon-Murray and Dao Henry



Chapter 27: Timor-Leste: An Intelligence Culture Developing and Overcoming Politicization - Agnes E. Venema



Chapter 28: Turkmenistan: Analysis of an Enigmatic Intelligence Culture - Réjeanne Lacroix



Chapter 29: Uzbekistan: Political Economy of the Intelligence Services - Evrim Gormus



Chapter 30: Vietnam: Intelligence-Led Policing Culture at the Borderland - Hai Thanh Luong



About the Authors



Index


Ryan Shaffer has put together a comprehensive collection of chapters that cover intelligence services in Central, East, South and Southeast Asia. If Asia is now at the forefront of world events, intelligence is the key to whether the United States can lead another strong alliance against another tyrant.

— Leon E. Panetta, former U.S. Secretary of Defense, and Director of the Central Intelligence Agency



As Asian countries assume ever greater salience in global affairs, one issue that is little understood is their intelligence capabilities and cultures. This ground-breaking publication makes good this deficit with detailed analyses covering all Asian countries large and small. I intend to keep my copy close to hand.

— Nigel Inkster, former director of operations and intelligence at the U.K.’s Secret Intelligence Service



“... comprehensive book” provides “cases in which the study of the intelligence agencies can give insights into broader political themes” and “some shafts of light on the intelligence cultures in less powerful countries.”

— Intelligence and National Security



These examples are indicative of what The Handbook of Asian Intelligence Cultures has to offer. The entries are well written and documented, comprising a very worthwhile contribution to the intelligence literature.

— Studies In Intelligence



… useful to academics and practitioners. Researchers, calling for more contributions from non-western perspectives, will welcome these edited volumes as springboards for deeper dives into the intelligence cultures of individual nations, or to develop their own comparative assessments. Governments and intelligence analysts, too, will find the volumes valuable.

— International Affairs


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