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Extremism and Intelligence
Author(s) -
Julian Richards
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of intelligence, conflict and warfare
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2561-8229
DOI - 10.21810/jicw.v2i3.1186
Subject(s) - dissent , political science , border security , public relations , democracy , political economy , broad spectrum , sociology , law and economics , criminology , computer security , law , politics , computer science , chemistry , combinatorial chemistry
Contemporary extremist threats encompass a widening spectrum, whereby long-standing threats are supplemented by the stubborn persistence of historical threats, and by the emergence of new threats and Violent Transnational Social Movements (VTSMs). For security and intelligence agencies, the management challenges posed by the evolving picture are complex and multi-faceted. Probably the most difficult challenge is that of prioritisation and the allocation of resources across the spectrum of investigation. Other challenges include those of recruiting and retaining staff with the right cutting-edge skills, especially in such fields of social media exploitation; and a fundamental definitional question of how to define some of the newly-emerging threats, avoiding questions of surveillance crossing-over into inappropriate suppression of legitimate dissent in a liberal democracy.

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