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Business intelligence --- Espionage --- Military intelligence
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Business intelligence --- Espionage --- Military intelligence
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Lansdale, Edward Geary --- Espionage [American ] --- Cold War
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From references to secret agents in The Art of War in 400 B.C.E. to the Bush administration's ongoing War on Terrorism, espionage has always been an essential part of state security.policies. This illustrated encyclopedia traces the fascinating stories of spies, intelligence, and counterintelligence throughout history, both internationally and in the United States. Written specifically for students and general readers by scholars, former intelligence officers, and other experts, Encyclopedia of Intelligence and Counterintelligence provides a unique background perspective for viewing history and current events. In easy-to-understand, non-technical language, it explains how espionage works as a function of national policy; traces the roots of national security; profiles key intelligence leaders, agents, and double-agents; discusses intelligence concepts and techniques; and profiles the security organizations and intelligence history and policies of nations around the world. As a special feature, the set also includes forewords by former CIA Director Robert M. Gates and former KGB Major General Oleg Kalugin that help clarify the evolution of intelligence and counterintelligence and their crucial roles in world affairs today.
Intelligence service --- Espionage --- Covert operations (Espionage) --- Operations, Undercover (Espionage) --- Spying --- Undercover operations (Espionage) --- Counter intelligence --- Counterespionage --- Counterintelligence --- Intelligence community --- Secret police (Intelligence service) --- Spies --- Public administration --- Research --- Disinformation --- Secret service --- Service des renseignements --- Espionnage --- Encyclopedias --- Encyclopédies
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Espionage --- Secret service --- Spies --- History --- Spain --- Agents, Secret --- Intelligencers (Spies) --- Operatives (Spies) --- Secret agents --- Spooks (Spies) --- Spying --- Subversive activities --- Secret police (Secret service) --- Police --- Detectives --- Intelligence service --- Covert operations (Espionage) --- Operations, Undercover (Espionage) --- Undercover operations (Espionage)
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Every business manager needs intelligence to find suppliers, mobilize capital, win customers and fend off rivals. Drawn from the author's own experiences and from a wide variety of disciplines, Competitive Intelligence provides a readable, practical and i
Business intelligence. --- Competition. --- Competition --- Competition (Economics) --- Competitiveness (Economics) --- Economic competition --- Business espionage --- Competitive intelligence --- Corporate intelligence --- Economic espionage --- Espionage, Business --- Espionage, Economic --- Espionage, Industrial --- Industrial espionage --- Intelligence, Business --- Intelligence, Corporate --- Economic aspects --- Commerce --- Conglomerate corporations --- Covenants not to compete --- Industrial concentration --- Monopolies --- Open price system --- Supply and demand --- Trusts, Industrial --- Business ethics --- Competition, Unfair --- Industrial management --- Confidential business information
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Why do spies have such cachet in the twentieth century? Why do they keep reinventing themselves? What do they mean in a political process? This book examines the tradition of the spy narrative from its inception in the late nineteenth century through the present day. Ranging from John le Carré's bestsellers to Elizabeth Bowen's novels, from James Bond to John Banville's contemporary narratives, Allan Hepburn sets the historical contexts of these fictions: the Cambridge spy ring; the Profumo Affair; the witch-hunts against gay men in the civil service and diplomatic corps in the 1950s.Instead of focusing on the formulaic nature of the genre, Intrigue emphasizes the responsiveness of spy stories to particular historical contingencies. Hepburn begins by offering a systematic theory of the conventions and attractions of espionage fiction and then examines the British and Irish tradition of spy novels. A final section considers the particular form that American spy narratives have taken as they have cross-fertilized with the tradition of American romance in works such as Joan Didion's Democracy and John Barth's Sabbatical.
Spy stories, English --- American fiction --- English fiction --- Spy stories, American --- Espionage, American --- Espionage, British --- Spy films --- Espionage in literature. --- Spies in literature. --- Cloak and dagger films --- Espionage films --- Secret agent films --- Secret service films --- Motion pictures --- British espionage --- American spy stories --- History and criticism. --- History
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Business intelligence --- Noncitizens --- Technology transfer --- Espionage --- Research, Industrial --- Military research --- Government policy --- Security measures
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