Intelligence Studies Digest No. 7 May 2019 - July 2019 - iafie

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Intelligence Studies Digest No. 7
                          May 2019 – July 2019
                              Compiled by Filip Kovacevic, PhD
                                  fkovacevic@usfca.edu

Books
Jim Acosta. The Enemy of the People: A Dangerous Time to Tell the Truth in America. Harper,
       2019 (June). 368 pp.
Tim Alberta. American Carnage: On the Front Lines of the Republican Civil War and the Rise of
       President Trump. Harper, 2019 (July). 688 pp.
Svetlana Alexievich. Last Witnesses: An Oral History of the Children of World War II.
       Trans. Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky Random House, 2019 (July). 320 pp.
Rick Atkinson. The British Are Coming: The War for America, Lexington to Princeton, 1775 –
       1777. Henry Holt and Co., 2019 (May). 800 pp.
Christopher Benfrey. If: The Untold Story of Kipling's American Years. Penguin Press, 2019
       (July). 256 pp.
Richard A. Clarke and Robert K. Knake. The Fifth Domain: Defending Our Country, Our
       Companies, and Ourselves in the Age of Cyber Threats. Penguin Press, 2019 (June). 352
       pp.
Chris DeRose. Star Spangled Scandal: Sex, Murder, and the Trial that Changed America. Regnery
       History, 2019 (June). 320 pp.
Jared Diamond. Upheaval: Turning Points for Nations in Crisis. Little, Brown and Company, 2019
       (May). 512 pp.
John Douglas and Mark Olshaker. The Killer Across the Table: Unlocking the Secrets of Serial
       Killers and Predators with the FBI's Original Mindhunter. Day Street Books, 2019 (May).
       352 pp.
Jack Fairweather. The Volunteer: One Man, an Underground Army, and the Secret Mission to
       Destroy Auschwitz. Custom House, 2019 (June). 528 pp.
Charles Fishman. One Giant Leap: The Impossible Mission That Flew Us to the Moon. Simon and
       Schuster, 2019 (June). 480 pp.
Steven M. Gillon. America's Reluctant Prince: The Life of John F. Kennedy, Jr. Dutton, 2019
       (July). 464 pp.
Molly Hemingway and Carrie Severino. Justice on Trial: The Kavanaugh Confirmation and the
       Future of the Supreme Court. Regnery Publishing 2019 (July). 375 pp.
Tony Horwitz. Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide. Penguin Press,
       2019 (May). 496 pp.
Annie Jacobsen. Surprise, Kill, Vanish: The Secret History of CIA Paramilitary Armies, Operators,
       and Assassins. Little, Brown and Company, 2019 (May). 560 pp.
Sam Kean. The Bastard Brigade: The True Story of the Renegade Scientists and Spies Who
       Sabotaged the Nazi Atomic Bomb. Little, Brown and Company, 2019 (July). 464 pp.
David Kenyon. Bletchley Park and D-Day. Yale University Press, 2019 (July). 320 pp.
Yoseph Komem. Courage and Grace: A Jewish Family's Holocaust True Survival Story. ValCal
       Software Ltd., 2019 (June). 460 pp.

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Mark R. Levin. Unfreedom of the Press. Threshold Editions, 2019 (May). 272 pp.
David McCullough. The Pioneers: The Heroic Story of the Settlers Who Brought the American
       Ideal West. Simon and Schuster, 2019 (May). 352 pp.
William H. McRaven. Sea Stories: My Life in Special Operations. Grand Central Publishing, 2019
       (May). 352 pp.
Antonio J. Mendez and Jonna Mendez with Matt Baglio. The Moscow Rules: The Secret CIA
       Tactics That Helped America Win The Cold War. Public Affairs, 2019 (May). 272 pp.
Ben Mezrich. Bitcoin Billionaires: A True Story of Genius, Betrayal, and Redemption. Flatiron
       Books, 2019 (May). 288 pp.
Jeff Morris with L.C. Mickler. Legion Rising: Surviving Combat and The Scars It Left Behind.
       Wild Blue Press, 2019 (July). 266 pp.
Philip Mudd. Black Site: The CIA in the Post-9/11 World. Liveright, 2019 (May). 272 pp.
Margaret O'Mara. The Code: Silicon Valley and the Remaking of America. Penguin Press, 2019
       (July). 512 pp.
Tom O'Neill with Dan Piepenberg. Chaos: Charles Manson, the CIA, and the Secret History of the
       Sixties. Little, Brown and Company, 2019 (June). 528 pp.
Sarah Parcak. Archaeology from Space: How the Future Shapes Our Past. Henry Holt and Co.,
       2019 (July). 288 pp.
Kasey S. Pipes. After the Fall: The Remarkable Comeback of Richard Nixon. Regnery History,
       2019 (July). 320 pp.
Richard Preston. Crisis in the Red Zone: The Story of the Deadliest Ebola Outbreak in History,
       and of the Outbreaks to Come. Random House, 2019 (July). 400 pp.
Joy-Ann Reid. The Man Who Sold America: Trump and the Unraveling of the American Story.
       William Morrow, 2019 (June). 304 pp.
David L. Roll. George Marshall: Defender of the Republic. Dutton Caliber, 2019 (July). 704 pp.
Dan Schilling and Lori Chapman Longfritz. Alone at Dawn: Medal of Honor Recipient John
       Chapman and the Untold Story of the World's Deadliest Special Operations Force. Grand
       Central Publishing, 2019 (June). 352 pp.
Allan Salkin and Aaron Short. The Method to Madness: Donald Trump's Ascent as Told by Those
       Who Were Hired, Fired, Inspired -- and Inaugurated. All Points Books, 2019 (July). 352
       pp.
Michael Savage. A Savage Life. William Morrow Paperbacks, 2019 (June). 288 pp.
Isha Sesay. Beneath the Tamarind Tree: A Story of Courage, Family, and the Lost Schoolgirls of
       Boko Haram. Dey Street Books, 2019 (July). 400 pp.
Bob J. Satawake. Breaking Protocol: Forging a Path Beyond Diplomacy. Self-Published, 2019
       (July). 196 pp.
Michael Wolff. Siege: Trump Under Fire. Henry Holt and Co., 2019 (June). 352 pp.

Academic Journals
Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 34, No. 4.
Articles:
Loch K. Johnson, “A Fond Farewell from INS Editor Loch K. Johnson,” p. 463.

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Alan Barnes, “A Confusion, Not A System: The Organizational Evolution of Strategic Intelligence
Assessment in Canada, 1943 to 2003,” pp. 464-479.
Lewis Herrington, “Predicting and Preventing Radicalization: An Alternative Approach to Suicide
Terrorism in Europe,” pp. 480-502.
Daniel Irwin and David R. Mandel, “Improving Information Evaluation for Intelligence
Production,” pp. 503-525.
James Goodchild, “A Most Pervasive Memoir: R. V. Jones and his Most Secret War,” pp. 526-
543.
Armin Krishnan, “Controlling Partners and Proxies in Pro-Insurgency Operations: The Case of
Syria,” pp. 544-560.
David V. Gloe, Michael S. Goodman, and David S. Frey, “Unforgiven: Russian Intelligence
Vengeance as Political Theater and Strategic Messaging,” pp. 561-575.
Rotem Dvir, “Post Factum Clarity: Failure to Identify Spontaneous Threats,” pp. 576-594.
William A. Tyrer, “The Dentist Chair: Dr. Gessel Schkolnikoff and the Mysteries of Soviet
Espionage,” pp. 595-613.
Perspectives on Intelligence
Loch K. Johnson and Mark Phythian, “A Note From the Editor Concerning a New INS Journal
Feature,” p. 614.
William Nolte, “US Intelligence and Its Future: Aligning with a New and Complex Environment,”
pp. 615-618.

Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 34, No. 5.
Andrew Seith, “Myanmar’s Intelligence Apparatus and the Fall of General Khin Nyunt,” pp. 619-
636.
Filip Kovacevic, “The FSB Literati: The First Prize Winners of the Russian Federal Security
Service Literature Award Competition, 2006-2018,” pp. 637-653.
Jonathan M Acuff and Madison J. Nowlin, “Competitive Intelligence and National Security
Estimates,” pp. 654-672.
James L. Regens, “Augmenting Human Cognition to Enhance Strategic, Operational, and Tactical
Intelligence,” pp. 673-687.
Christopher J. Murphy, “Dramatising Intelligence History on the BBC: the Camp 020 Affair,” pp.
688-702.
David Lonsdale and Maria dos Santos Lonsdale, “Handling and Communicating Intelligence
Information: A Conceptual, Historical and Information Design Analysis,” pp. 703-726.

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Ryan Shaffer, “Indian Spies Inside Pakistan: South Asian Human Intelligence Across Borders,”
pp. 727-742.
Melanie Brand, “Mind Games: Cognitive Bias, US Intelligence and the 1968 Soviet Invasion of
Czechoslovakia,” pp. 743-757.
Review Article
Joanne Hopkins and R. Gerald Hughes, “Refugees, Migration, and Security: States, Intelligence
Agencies, and the Perpetual Global Crisis,” pp. 758-770.
Book Review
Reg Whitaker – a review of Peter Gill’s Intelligence Governance and Democratization: A
Comparative Analysis of the Limits of Reform, London and New York: Routledge, 2016, 225 pp.,
and Peter Gill and Michael M. Andregg, eds., Democratization and Intelligence, London and New
York: Routledge, 2015, 155 pp., pp. 771-774.

International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence, Vol. 32, No. 2.
Articles
John A. Gentry, “’Truth’ as a Tool of the Politicization of Intelligence,” pp. 217-247.
Lawrence E. Cline, “Partisans, Hybrids, and Intelligence,” pp. 248-271.
Carl Anthony Wege, “Iranian Counterintelligence,” pp. 272-294.
Mario Vignettes, “Mexico’s Intelligence Community: A Critical Description,” pp. 295-321.
Diego Esparza and Thomas C. Bruneau, “Closing the Gap Between Law Enforcement and
National Security Intelligence: Comparative Approaches,” pp. 322-353.
Margaret S. Marangione, “Millennials: Truthtellers or Threats?” pp. 354-378.
Tony Ingesson, “Anticipating the Zombie Apocalypse: Using Improbability to Teach Intelligence
Analysis,” pp. 379-390.
Book Reviews:
Jefferson Adams – a review of Howard Blum’s In the Enemy’s House: The Secret Sage of the FBI
Agent and the Code Braker Who Caught the Russian Spies, New York: Harper/Harper Collins,
2018, 317 pp., pp. 391-396.
Benjamin B. Fischer – a review of Seth D. Jones’ A Covert Action: Reagan, the CIA, and the Cold
War Poland, New York: Norton, 2018, 394 pp., pp. 396-408.
Marian K. Leighton – a review of Mark Galeotti’s The Vory: Russia’s Super Mafia, New Haven,
CT: Yale University Press, 2018, 344 pp., pp. 409-414.
Jan Goldman – a review of Michael Gross and Tamar Meisels, eds. Soft War: The Ethics of
Unarmed Conflict, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2017, 268 pp., pp. 414-416.

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Matthew D. Crosston – a review of Kathleen E. Smith’s Moscow 1956: The Silenced Spring,
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2017, 434 pp., pp. 417-421.
Joseph W. Wippl – a review of Christopher Moran, Mark Stout, Ioanna Iordanou, and Paul
Maddrell, eds. Spy Chiefs, Vol. 1 and Vol. 2, Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 2018,
352 pp. and 288 pp., pp. 422-432.

International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence, Vol. 32, No. 3.
Articles
Avner Barnea, “Big Data and Counterintelligence in Western Countries,” pp. 433-447.
Sagit Stivi-Kerbis, “The Surprise of Peace: The Challenge of Intelligence in Identifying Positive
Strategic-Political Shifts,” pp. 448-466.
Max Kuhelj Bugaric, “Radical Technological Innovation in Satellite Reconnaissance: from
CORONA to CLASSIC WIZARD,” pp. 467-493.
Ralf Lillbacka, “An Outline of a Clausewitzian Theory of Intelligence,” pp. 494-523.
Jan Goldman, “Establishing Deniability and the Signing of the National Security Act of 1947,” pp.
524-541.
Rami Rom, Amir Gilat, and Rose Mary Sheldon, “Kissinger’s Lost Peace: The Gazit File,” pp.
542-559.
Harry Carl Schaub, “The World War II and Early Cold War Intelligence Careers of U.S.
Ambassador Robert Strausz-Hupé,” pp. 560-586.
Larry Lundy, Alexa O’Brien, Christine Solis, Aaron Sowers, and Jeffrey Turner, “The Ethics of
Applied Intelligence in Modern Conflict,” pp. 587-599.
Commentary
Jeffrey P. Rogg, “’That the Republic Should Suffer No Harm:’ The Constitutional Conundrum of
the Executive, Secret Intelligence, and the Rule of Law,” pp. 600-628.
Book Reviews
Jefferson Adams – a review of Katherine Verdery’s My Life as a Spy: Investigations in a Secret
Police File, Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2018, 344 pp., pp. 629-632.
James J. Wirtz – a review of Patrick F. Walsh’s Intelligence, Biosecurity and Bioterrorism,
London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2018, 300 pp., pp. 632-635.
Nigel West – a review of Richard Davenport-Hines’ Enemies Within: Communists, the Cambridge
Five and the Making of Modern Britain, London: William Collins, 2018, 672 pp., pp. 635-641.

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Stephen Irving Max Schwab – a review of Bruce Berkowitz’ Playfair: The True Story of the British
Secret Agent Who Changed How We See the World, Fairfax, VA: George Mason University Press,
2018, 478 pp., pp. 641-646.

Journal of Intelligence History, Vol. 18, No. 2.
Articles
Ben Wheatley, “A Visual Examination of the battle of Prokhorovka,” pp. 115-163.
Christian Deubner, “Ludwig Deubner: A Professor from Königsberg and the Birth of German
Signal Intelligence in WWI,” pp. 164-198.
Lukas Grawe, “The Gehlen Organization, Nazis, and the Middle East,” pp. 220-232.
Austin Duckworth and Thomas M. Hunt, “Espionage in the Eternal City: the CIA, Ukrainian
emigres, and the 1960 Rome Olympic Games,” pp. 233-252.
Paul Moon, “From Tasman to Cook: The Proto-Intelligence Phase of New Zealand’s
Colonisation,” pp. 253-268.
Book Reviews
Dan Lomas – a review of Andrew Lownie’s Stalin’s Englishman: The Lives of Guy Burgess,
London: Hodder & Stoughton, 2015, pp. 269-270.
Andrei Alexandru Babadac – a review of Peter Gill and Michael Andregg, eds., Democratization
of Intelligence, London: Routledge, 2015, pp. 271-272.
Timothy Andrews Sayle – a review of Huw Dylan’s Defence Intelligence and the Cold War:
Britain’s Joint Intelligence Bureau, 1945-1964, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014, 240 + xvi
pp., pp. 272-274.
Natasha Smith and Emma A. Hall - a review of Rob Evans and Paul Lewis’ Undercover: The
True Story of Britain’s Secret Police, London: Guardian Books, 2013, 376 pp., pp. 274-276.
Julian Schmid – a review of Joseph Oldham’s Paranoid Visions: Spies, Conspiracies, and the
Secret State in British Television Drama, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2017, 232
pp., pp. 276-277.

Studies in Intelligence: Journal of the American Intelligence Professional, Vol.
63, No. 2.
Intelligence Today and Tomorrow
Joseph W. Gartin, “The Future of Analysis.”
Historical Perspectives
Mary Samantha Barton, “Special Attaché Boylstron Beal, the ‘Red Scare,’ and the Origins of the
US-UK Intelligence Relationship, 1919-27.”

                                               6
Richard A. Mobley, “Lessons from Four North Korean Shootdown Attempts during 1959-81.”
Intelligence in Public Media
“Argo Producer Chay Carter: Thinking about Film and the World of Intelligence,” interviewed by
Peter Usowski and Sara Lichterman.
Thomas G. Coffey – a review of Andrew Roberts’ Churchill: Walking with Destiny, New York:
Viking, 2018, 1106 pp.
David A. Foy – a review of Francis Gary Powers, Jr. and Keith Dunavant’s Spy Pilot: Francis
Gary Powers, The U-2 Incident, and a Controversial Cold War Legacy, New York: Prometheus
Books, 296 pp.
Leslie C. – a review of Derek Leebaert’s Grand Improvisation: America Confronts the British
Superpower, 1945-1957, Farrar, Strauss, and Giroux, 2018, 612 pp.
J. R. Seeger – a review of Audra J. Wolfe’s Freedom’s Laboratory: The Cold War Struggle for
the Soul of Science, Baltimore, MD: John Hopkins University Press, 2018, 302 pp.
Hayden Peake and others, “Intelligence Officer’s Bookshelf.”

The Intelligencer: Journal of U.S. Intelligence Studies, Vol. 25, No. 1.
Introduction: From the 2019 Symposium
Amb. Ronald E. Neumann, “The Role of Intelligence in a Free Society,” pp. 3-5.
P. W. Singer and Emerson Brooking, “Weaponization of Social Media: The Real Cyber Threat is
Your ‘Likes,’” pp. 5-9.
Current Issues
Gene Poteat, “The Sound of Crickets: New Dangers Facing U.S. Personnel Serving Abroad,” pp.
9-13.
Caitlin Anglemier, “Telling Truth to Power Means Power Must Talk Back,” pp. 13-17.
Historical Context
Nicholas W. Wedge, “Face to Face with MI6 Director General Sir Richard Dearlove, KCMG,” pp.
17-23.
John K. Chang, PhD, “East Asians in Soviet Intelligence and the Continuities between Soviet and
Russian Intelligence Practices,” pp. 23-31.
Kenneth Daigler, “James Lafayette (Armistead), American Spy,” pp. 31-35.
Professional Insights
Peter C. Oleson, “When Intelligence Made a Difference – Part I Intro,” pp. 35-37.
Gene Poteat, “George Washington, Spymaster Extraordinaire,” pp. 37-39.

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Gene Poteat, “Lafayette and the French Intrigue to Lead the American Revolution,” pp. 39-41.
Michael Fredholm, “How Sweden Chose Sides,” pp. 41-45.
Ken Daigler, “George Washington’s Attacks on Trenton and Princeton, 1776-77,” pp. 45-49.

American Historical Review, Vol. 124, No. 3.
Thomas Meaney, “Frantz Fanon and the CIA Man,” pp. 983-995.

African Studies, Vol. 78, No. 2.
Nancy J. Jacobs, “The Awkward Biography of the Young Washington Okumu: CIA Asset (?) and
the Prayer Breakfast’s Man in Africa,” pp. 225-245.

Asian Security, Vol. 15, No. 2.
Darren J. Lim, “What Money Can’t Buy: The Security Externalities of Chinese Economic
Statecraft in Post-War Sri Lanka,” pp. 73-92.

Astra Salvensis (Romania), Vol. 5, No. 11.
Yuri G. Smertin, “Word and Work of the Press Agency ‘Novosti’: Soviet Propaganda in Africa
During the Cold War,” pp. 257-272.

Baltic Worlds, Vol. 12, No. 2.
Viktoriya Sukovata, “Memories of the War in Soviet and Russian Spy Cinema: Evolution of
Trauma,” pp. 29-36.

California Law Review, Vol. 107, No. 3.
Lee Kovarsky, “Citizenship, National Security Detention, and the Habeas Remedy,” pp. 867-932.

Cardiovascular Pathology, Vol. 40.
Rolf F. Barth, Sergey V. Brodsky, and Miroljub Ruzic, “What Did Joseph Stalin Really Die Of?
A Reappraisal of His Illness, Death, and Autopsy Findings,” pp. 55-58.

Computers and Security, Vol. 83.
Joseph M. Hatfield, “Virtuous Human Hacking: The Ethics of Social Engineering in Penetration-
Testing,” pp. 354-366.

Computers in Human Behavior, Vol. 94.
Chris Stiff, “The Dark Triad and Facebook Surveillance: How Machiavellianism, Psychopathy,
but not Narcissism, Predict Using Facebook to Spy on Others,” pp. 62-69.

Conflict Management and Peace Science, Vol. 36, No. 4.

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Andrew Boutton, “Of Terrorism and Revenue: Why Foreign Aid Exacerbates Terrorism in
Personalist Regimes,” pp. 359-384.

Conflict Studies Quarterly, No. 28.
Abdulsalami M. Deji, “Nigeria: Democracy and Security. The Role of the Military, 1999-2018,”
pp. 33-45.

Contemporary Security Policy, Vol. 40, No. 3.
Christian Leuprecht, Joseph Szeman, and David B. Skillicorn, “The Damoclean Sword of
Offensive Cyber: Policy Uncertainty and Collective Insecurity,” pp. 382-407.

Counter Terrorist Trends and Analysis, Vol. 11, No. 6.
Jade Hutchinson, “Far-Right Terrorism: The Christchurch Attack and Potential Implications on
the Asia Pacific Landscape,” pp. 19-28.

Crime, Law, and Social Change, Vol. 71, No. 4.
James P. Walsh, “Education or Enforcement? Enrolling Universities in the Surveillance and
Policing of Migration,” pp. 325-344.

Critical Sociology, Vol. 45, No. 3.
Florian Zollmann, “Bringing Propaganda Back into News Media Studies,” pp. 329-345.
Paul Lashmar, “From Silence to Primary Definer: The Emergence of an Intelligence Lobby in the
Public Sphere,” pp. 411-430.

Demokratizatsiya, Vol. 27, No. 3.
Vasil Navumau, “Social Media as a Source of Counter-Hegemonic Discourses: Micro-Level
Analysis of the Belarussian ‘Silent Actions’ Protest Movement,” pp. 287-317.

European Journal of International Security, Vol. 4, No. 2.
Alexander Lanoszka, “Disinformation in International Politics,” pp. 227-248.

European Review, Vol. 27, No. 2.
Marek Gorka, “Moral and Legal Dilemmas of the New Polish Security Policy,” pp. 260-274.

European Security, Vol. 28, No. 2.
Hendrik Hegemann and Ulrich Schneckener, “Politicising European Security: From Technocratic
to Contentious Politics?” pp. 133-152.

Fletcher Forum of World Affairs, Vol. 43, No. 2.

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Andrea J. Dew, “Fighting for Influence in Open Societies: The Role of Resilience and
Transparency,” pp. 151-165.

Foreign Affairs, Vol. 98, No. 3.
Amy Zegart and Michael Morell, “Spies, Lies, and Algorithms: Why U.S. Intelligence Agencies
Must Adapt or Fail,” pp. 85-96.
Paul Scharre, “Killer Apps: The Real Dangers of an AI Arms Race,” pp. 135-144.
Calvert W. Jones, “All the King’s Consultants: The Perils of Advising Authoritarians,” pp. 145-
154.

Fordham International Law Journal, Vol. 42, No. 5.
J. Benton Heath, “National Security and Economic Globalization: Toward Collision or
Reconciliation?” pp. 1431-1449.

India Quarterly, Vol. 75, No. 2.
Avinash Godboie, “Stability in the Xi Era: Trends in Ethnic Policy in Xinjiang and Tibet Since
2012,” pp. 228-244.

India Review, Vol. 18, No. 3.
Paul Staniland and Drew Stommes, “New Data on Indian Security Force Fatalities and
Demographics,” pp. 288-323.

International Affairs, Vol. 95, No. 4.
Harsh V. Pant and Kartik Bommakanti, “India’s National Security: Challenges and Dilemmas,”
pp. 835-857.
Alice Pannier and Olivier Schmitt, “To Fight Another Day: France Between the Fight Against
Terrorism and Future Warfare,” pp. 897-916.

International Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 23, No. 6.
Eric Freedman, “Returning to the Mission? Journalists After Jail,” pp. 957-973.

International Journal of Law, Crime and Justice, Vol. 57.
Vincenzo Ruggiero, “Front-Line Practitioners Versus Received Theories of Crime and Terrorism,”
pp. 59-69.

International Politics, Vol. 56, No. 3.
Monika Sus, “Institutional Innovation of EU’s Foreign and Security Policy: Big Leap for EU’s
Strategic Actorness or Much Ado about Nothing?” pp. 411-425.

Journal of the History of Sexuality, Vol. 28, No. 2.
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Robert Byron Genter, “’An Unusual and Peculiar Relationship’: Lesbianism and the American
Cold War National Security State,” pp. 235-262.

Journal of Modern Greek Studies, Vol. 37, No. 1.
Petros Violakis, “Europeanization of National Defense and Security: The Greek Case,” pp. 61-98.

Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol. 51, No. 2.
Francesca Lessa, “Operation Condor on Trial: Justice for Transnational Human Rights Crimes in
South America,” pp. 409-439.

Korean Journal of Defense Analysis, Vol. 31, No. 2.
Min-hyung Kim, “Explaining the American Failure of Preventing North Korean Nuclear
Proliferation: What Went Wrong and What Lessons to Take,” pp. 233-249.

Michigan Law Review, Vol. 117, No. 7.
Shirin Sinnar, “Separate and Unequal: The Law of “Domestic” and “International” Terrorism,”
pp. 1333-1404.

Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 55, No. 3.
Jacob Abadi, “Saudi Arabia’s Rapprochement with Israel: The National Security Imperatives,” pp.
433-449.

Ohio Northern University Law Review, Vol. 45, No. 2.
Fionnuala Ni. Aolain, “How Can States Counter Terrorism While Protecting Human Rights?” pp.
389-409.

Ohio State Law Journal, Vol. 80, No. 3.
Ido Kilovaty, “Freedom to Hack,” pp. 455-520.

Pacific Journalism Review, Vol. 25, No. 1-2.
Colin Peacock, “The New Zealand Mosque Massacre: ‘End of Innocence’ for Media and Nation,”
pp. 18-27.

Police Quarterly, Vol. 22, No. 2.
Morgan Burcher and Chad Whelan, “Intelligence-Led Policing in Practice: Reflections From
Intelligence Analysts,” pp. 139-160.

Policy and Internet, Vol. 11, No. 2.
Ido Sivan-Sevilla, “Complementaries and Contradictions: National Security and Privacy Risks in
U.S. Federal Policy, 1968-2018,” pp. 172-214.

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Political Studies, Vol. 67, No. 2.
Richard J. Aldrich and Christopher R. Moran, “’Delayed Disclosure’: National Security, Whistle-
Blowers and the Nature of Secrecy,” pp. 291-306.

Post-Soviet Affairs, Vol. 35, No. 4.
Tor Bukkvoll, “Fighting on Behalf of the State: The Issue of Pro-Government Militia Autonomy
in the Donbas War,” pp. 293-307.

Public Choice, Vol. 179, No. 3-4.
Yang Jiao and Zijun Luo, “A Model of Terrorism and Counterterrorism with Location Choices,”
pp. 301-313.

Science and Engineering Ethics, Vol. 25, No. 3.
Christopher Kampe et al., “Bringing the National Security Agency into the Classroom: Ethical
Reflections on Academia-Intelligence Agency Partnership,” pp. 869-898.

Third World Quarterly, Vol. 40, No. 6.
Shahram Akbarzadeh et al., “The Kurds in Iran: Balancing National and Ethnic Identity in a
Securitised Environment,” pp. 1145-1162.

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