List of contributors
ISBN: 978-0-85724-389-8, eISBN: 978-0-85724-390-4
ISSN: 0196-1152
Publication date: 26 January 2011
Citation
(2011), "List of contributors", Maret, S. (Ed.) Government Secrecy (Research in Social Problems and Public Policy, Vol. 19), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Bingley, pp. ix-x. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0196-1152(2011)0000019002
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2011, Emerald Group Publishing Limited
- Research in Social Problems and Public Policy
- Research in social problems and public policy
- Copyright page
- List of contributors
- Introduction: Government secrecy
- Part I Musings on secrecy, privacy, censorship, and conspiracy
- Sigmund Freud as a theorist of government secrecy
- Privacy and secrecy: Public reserve and the handling of the BP Gulf oil disaster
- Taxonomy of concepts related to the censorship of history
- Secrecy and disclosure: Policies and consequences in the American experience
- Government secrecy and conspiracy theories
- Part II Government secrecy and national security
- The Israeli paradox: The military censorship as a protector of the freedom of the press
- National security, secrecy and the media – a British view
- Project censored international: Colleges and universities validate independent news and challenge global media censorship
- Operation Pedro Pan: The hidden history of 14,000 Cuban children
- Part III Government secrecy: current policy
- Secrecy reform or secrecy redux? Access to information in the Obama administration
- Secrecy, complicity, and resistance: Political control of climate science communication under the Bush–Cheney administration
- Suspicious activity reporting: U.S. domestic intelligence in a postprivacy age?
- Classifying knowledge, creating secrets: Government policy for dual-use technology
- Statecrafting ignorance: Strategies for managing burdens, secrecy, and conflict
- Corruption, secrecy, and access-to-information legislation in Africa: A cross-national study of political institutions
- Mexico's transparency reforms: Theory and practice
- Part IV Government secrecy: Ethical tensions
- Is open source intelligence an ethical issue?
- “Open secrets”: The masked dynamics of ethical failures and administrative evil
- The corrupting influence of secrecy on national policy decisions