The post–World War II secret state (governmental bodies that handle national security, including signals intelligence, spying, counterintelligence, and some aspects of policing, as well as the central bureaucratic mechanisms of their control) is a lacuna in the history of UK computing. This article assesses the extent to which the UK secret state was a major user of computing technologies and examines the character of its computing tasks, as well as its relationships with industry and government, more broadly
This article recounts the experience of a professional historian in being given the keys to the king...
How academics, novelists, conspiracy theorists and former spies write about intelligence. Secrecy ha...
The puzzling absence of signals intelligence (SIGINT) from the historiography of World War II for ne...
This article provides a systematic analysis of post-war government policy towards the history of sec...
Most of the records of the three British secret services relating to the Cold War remain closed. Nev...
This article is an overview of the history of the academic study of intelligence in the United Kingd...
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University Lo...
Many intelligence scandals in the news today seem unprecedented - from Russian meddling in the 2016 ...
The official mechanisms of intelligence oversight and accountability in the United Kingdom are argua...
This article reveals a startling episode unknown to contemporaries and historians: Britain’s secret ...
Many intelligence scandals in the news today seem unprecedented - from Russian meddling in the 2016 ...
Many intelligence scandals in the news today seem unprecedented - from Russian meddling in the 2016 ...
Why did Britain remove the population of an idyllic Indian Ocean archipelago? Why has Britain resist...
This paper takes a high level view of the dynamics of the Cold War and their influence on management...
This article recounts the experience of a professional historian in being given the keys to the king...
This article recounts the experience of a professional historian in being given the keys to the king...
How academics, novelists, conspiracy theorists and former spies write about intelligence. Secrecy ha...
The puzzling absence of signals intelligence (SIGINT) from the historiography of World War II for ne...
This article provides a systematic analysis of post-war government policy towards the history of sec...
Most of the records of the three British secret services relating to the Cold War remain closed. Nev...
This article is an overview of the history of the academic study of intelligence in the United Kingd...
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University Lo...
Many intelligence scandals in the news today seem unprecedented - from Russian meddling in the 2016 ...
The official mechanisms of intelligence oversight and accountability in the United Kingdom are argua...
This article reveals a startling episode unknown to contemporaries and historians: Britain’s secret ...
Many intelligence scandals in the news today seem unprecedented - from Russian meddling in the 2016 ...
Many intelligence scandals in the news today seem unprecedented - from Russian meddling in the 2016 ...
Why did Britain remove the population of an idyllic Indian Ocean archipelago? Why has Britain resist...
This paper takes a high level view of the dynamics of the Cold War and their influence on management...
This article recounts the experience of a professional historian in being given the keys to the king...
This article recounts the experience of a professional historian in being given the keys to the king...
How academics, novelists, conspiracy theorists and former spies write about intelligence. Secrecy ha...
The puzzling absence of signals intelligence (SIGINT) from the historiography of World War II for ne...