This link has been bookmarked by 1 people . It was first bookmarked on 21 Nov 2008, by TransTracker.
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21 Nov 08
TransTrackerAn intersting and informative bit of quick, qualitative, longitudinal analysis here that gives good insight into the changes beginning to take place in the U.S. intelligence community. Ironically, enough, the emerging impacts of new media, information, and communication technologies for intelligence was the topic of the week in the "IT and Global Conflict" course I am teaching at U of U. As such, I forwarded this post to my students.
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insular, stove-piped work is being replaced with barrier-busting exchanges of informed viewpoints across the globe. Here’s how the NIC authors break it down:
Global Trends 2010: “… relied exclusively on expertise within the U.S. Intelligence Community.”
Global Trends 2015: “…engaged more numerous and more varied groups of non-US Government experts, most of whom were American citizens.”
Global Trends 2020: “…we greatly expanded the participation of non-American specialists by convening six seminars on five continents.”
Global Trends 2025: “In addition to increasing still more the participation of non-USG experts from the United States and abroad to develop the framework for the current study, we shared several drafts with participants via the Internet and a series of discussion sessions across the US and in several other countries.”
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