Sharing publications, events, conferences, and calls for papers from the most comprensive database on intelligence studies, IntelArchive: Intelligence Studies Database (https://intelarchive.io/).
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IntelArchive
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Journal article: Rethinking Taiwan's Cold War Intelligence: The Guangwu Force and Covert Operations against the PRC, 1965-1975. by Sheng-Hsiung Su (published 01-04-2026)
https://openurl.ebsco.com/contentitem/gcd:193303195?sid=ebsco:plink:crawler&id=ebsco:gcd:193303195
IntelArchive
New addition
Journal article: Scripting the Soviet “Spy of the Century”: The Unproduced Biopic on Kim Philby, 1975–1980 by Joseph Oldham (published 28-05-2026)
https://doi.org/10.1162/JCWS.a.1313
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Journal article: Inventing Taiwan 007: Female spy subjectivity in 1960s cinema by Huang YenHsuan (published 27-05-2026)
https://doi.org/10.1080/17508061.2026.2662108
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Journal article: Development of Gatra Trigger National Resilience in Combating the Threat of Foreign Intelligence Covert Actions by Pujo Widodo et al. (published 29-05-2026)
https://juna.nusantarajournal.com/index.php/juna/article/view/293
New addition
Journal article: Bridges to bikers: Royal Canadian Mounted Police surveillance of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union by Chris Madsen (published 21-05-2026)
https://doi.org/10.1080/02684527.2026.2670739
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Journal article: Targeted listening: German broadcast monitoring and Goebbels’ propaganda ministry in the Second World War by Peter Busch (published 25-05-2026)
https://doi.org/10.1080/02684527.2026.2671979
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Journal article: FROM WORDS TO WARFARE: THE IMPACT OF TRANSLATION ERRORS ON SECURITY IN INTELLIGENCE OPERATIONS by Ayşe Sungur (published 22-05-2026)
https://dergipark.org.tr/en/pub/gbd/article/1785120
In person event
Book Launch: Secret Alliances with Tony Insall by King's Centre for the Study of Intelligence (KCSI) (on 2026-05-27)
https://kcsi.uk/events/book-launch-secret-alliances-with-tony-insall
New addition
Book chapter: The Spy Figure in British Radical Literature, 1790–1804: Sincerity and Coded Language by Steph Codsi (published 01-01-2026)
https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/isbn/9781399529280/html?lang=de
New addition
Podcast: From Cartels to Terrorists, the CIA, FBI, and White House: The Vast Career of Karen Schaefer by Karen Schaefer (published 26-05-2026)
https://thecyberwire.com/podcasts/spycast/734/notes
Karen Schaefer retired from the CIA in 2019, after 26 years of service. She started out in Latin America and ended with a stint at the FBI. In between, she earned numerous intelligence awards and held key positions that spanned operational, supervisory, and policy roles. Her many job titles included Chief of Base in Iraq and Director of Intelligence Programs in the White House's National Security Council. But what was it all really like? Sasha sat down to talk about how Karen's career began, how she navigated being one of the few women in the room, and how she brought different intelligence agencies together.
Examines the spy figure in a selection of British radical writing from 1790–1804 Examines the spy figure in a selection of British radical writing from 1790 to1804, the decade following the French Revolution (1789) to soon after the Peace of Amiens and renewed hostilities of war (1804) Draws on a wide range of historical documents including trial literature, newspaper articles, and letters from or about spies Connects the spy figure and surveillance to the use of literary encryption in radical writing of the 1790s Maps the correlation between surveillance and Romantic sincerity Applies current theories from Surveillance Studies to illuminate modes of encryption and concerns with the spy figure in the literary works The book argues that literary authors who had initially supported the ideals of the French Revolution, became more coded and elliptical in their writing as a response to surveillance and repression in Britain in the 1790s. It shows that authors appropriated the tools of invisible state surveillance by using coded modes and methods, including pseudonymity, elision, satire, irony, innuendo, allegory and self-censorship, amongst others. These strategies were often used performatively to mock the spy figure and interrogate the encroaching culture of secrecy, silencing and suspicion; but also, as a precautionary measure to protect writers from laws against sedition and treason. Applying surveillance theory, the book provides accessible and illuminating readings of literary works by William Godwin, John Thelwall, Mary Robinson, Robert Bage, and William Blake.