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Bruce, James B.; George, Roger Z.
Introduction: intelligence analysis the emergence of a discipline
p. 1-15
|
Hedley, John J.
The evolution of intelligence analysis
p. 19-34
|
Kerr, Richard J.
The track record: CIA analysis from 1950 to 2000
p. 35-54
|
Fisher, Rebecca; Johnston
Is intelligence analysis a discipline?
p. 55-69
|
McLauchlin, John
Serving the national policymaker
p. 71-81
|
Steinberg, James B.
The policymaker´s perspective: transparency and partnership
p. 82-90
|
Treverton, Gregory
Intelligence analysis: between "politicization" and irrelevance
p. 91-104
|
George, Roger Z.
The art of strategy and intelligence
p. 107-121
|
Bruce, James B.; Bennett, Michael
Foreign denial and deception: analytical imperatives
p. 122-137
|
Thomas, David
U.S. Military intelligence analysis: old and new chalenges
p. 138-154
|
Davis, Jack
Why bad things heppen to good analysts
p. 157-170
|
Bruce, James B.
Making analysis more reliable: why epistemology matters to intelligence
p. 171-190
|
Bruce, James B.
The missing link: the analyst - collector relationship
p. 191-210
|
Gannon, John C.
Managing analysis in the information age
p. 213-225
|
Lowenthal, Mork M.
Intelligence in transition: analysis after september 11 and iraq
p. 26-237
|
Medina, Carmen A.
The new analysis
p. 238-248
|
Heuer Jr, Richard J.
Computer-aided analysis of competing hypotheses
p. 251--265
|
Smith, Timothy J.
Predictive warniong: teams, networks, and scientific method
p. 266-280
|
Berkowitz, Bruce
Homland security intelligence: rationale, requirements, and current status
p. 281-294
|
George, Roger Z.; Bruce, James B.
Conclusion: the age of analysis
p. 295-307