This article develops an ‘economy of secrecy’ as a framework to understand how secrecy regulates interstate relations and to explicate why states react differently to breaches of secrecy. Drawing upon Simmel, the article argues that secrecy shapes interstate relations by tuning the ratio of ‘knowledge’ and ‘ignorance’. Furthermore, while the economy of secrecy acknowledges the existence of many types of secret, it emphasises their common underlying mechanisms, namely: secrecy as a field of power, secrecy as a field of performance, and secrecy as a normative terrain. Finally, the economy of secrecy is agnostic with regard to the moral character of promoting secrecy. In order to substantiate the argument, the article examines three recent ite...
Government secrecy frequently fails. Despite the executive branch’s obsessive hoarding of certain ki...
Government secrecy frequently fails. Despite the executive branch’s obsessive hoarding of certain ki...
This Issue Brief reviews the relationship between secrecy, transparency and accountability in the Un...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 46-56.Chapter One. The nature of secrecy -- Chapter Two. The ...
The question posed in this article is how to explain that the governance of secrecy in EU external r...
In the last few years, the Economic Espionage Act (EEA), a 1996 statute that criminalizes trade secr...
Drawing on a wide range of material, from memoirs of former spy masters to the highly acclaimed TV s...
This article offers a sociological account of how we might analyse the relationship between contempo...
Securitization has a complex and generative relationship to publicness. A fuller understanding of th...
This article explores how risk rationales affect and alter national security secrecy. While the tran...
This chapter analyses transparency in the context of the institutionalisation of transatlantic relat...
This chapter analyses transparency in the context of the institutionalisation of transatlantic relat...
This chapter analyses transparency in the context of the institutionalisation of transatlantic relat...
This article examines the notion of shared secrets and the procedures by which secrecy is not the op...
as a nation, we seem to be of two minds about secrecy. we know that government secrecy is incompatib...
Government secrecy frequently fails. Despite the executive branch’s obsessive hoarding of certain ki...
Government secrecy frequently fails. Despite the executive branch’s obsessive hoarding of certain ki...
This Issue Brief reviews the relationship between secrecy, transparency and accountability in the Un...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 46-56.Chapter One. The nature of secrecy -- Chapter Two. The ...
The question posed in this article is how to explain that the governance of secrecy in EU external r...
In the last few years, the Economic Espionage Act (EEA), a 1996 statute that criminalizes trade secr...
Drawing on a wide range of material, from memoirs of former spy masters to the highly acclaimed TV s...
This article offers a sociological account of how we might analyse the relationship between contempo...
Securitization has a complex and generative relationship to publicness. A fuller understanding of th...
This article explores how risk rationales affect and alter national security secrecy. While the tran...
This chapter analyses transparency in the context of the institutionalisation of transatlantic relat...
This chapter analyses transparency in the context of the institutionalisation of transatlantic relat...
This chapter analyses transparency in the context of the institutionalisation of transatlantic relat...
This article examines the notion of shared secrets and the procedures by which secrecy is not the op...
as a nation, we seem to be of two minds about secrecy. we know that government secrecy is incompatib...
Government secrecy frequently fails. Despite the executive branch’s obsessive hoarding of certain ki...
Government secrecy frequently fails. Despite the executive branch’s obsessive hoarding of certain ki...
This Issue Brief reviews the relationship between secrecy, transparency and accountability in the Un...