For over 65 years the BBC Monitoring Service has been providing Whitehall and its diplomatic, intelligence and security communities with a rich seam of 'open-source' information mined from the word's media. However, while the continued importance of this work remains undisputed, in 2003 the future of the Monitoring Service was brought into serious doubt as a result of a proposed major reduction in its government funding. The source of this problem was a decade old dispute between sponsoring government departments over where the burden of responsibility lay for the costs of the service. The ensuing deadlock led the Intelligence and Security Co-ordinator, Sir David Omand, to commission a Review of BBC Monitoring by Sir Quentin Thomas whose re...
The Hutton Inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the death of Dr David Kelly in 2003 shed a uni...
Studies of the relationship between ministers and the intelligence agencies have tended to focus on ...
Report on the inquiry, chaired by Lord Puttnam, that examined the future of public service televisi...
2004 began with the culmination of an inquiry by Lord Hutton into the circumstances leading up to th...
The Hutton report of 2004 was the outcome of an inquiry set up to examine ‘the circumstances surroun...
This article provides a detailed account of a largely neglected episode of Government intervention i...
The independent viability of the BBC from the government of the day has always been significantly a...
The thesis "Comparison of the BBC's Producers' guidelines and Editorial guidelines before and after ...
Charlie Beckett argues that the Savile scandal is not only damaging for the BBC’s reputation but als...
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University Lo...
Last month, MI5 Director General Andrew Parker appeared on BBC Radio 4 to make the case for intellig...
The revelations by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden have illustrated the scale and extent of digital...
On 19th January 2004, the UK government published An Independent Review of Government Communication...
The scandals which erupted within the BBC in November 2012 posed questions about the governance and ...
BBC boss Tony Hall has outlined his vision of the BBC’s future including the idea of everyone having...
The Hutton Inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the death of Dr David Kelly in 2003 shed a uni...
Studies of the relationship between ministers and the intelligence agencies have tended to focus on ...
Report on the inquiry, chaired by Lord Puttnam, that examined the future of public service televisi...
2004 began with the culmination of an inquiry by Lord Hutton into the circumstances leading up to th...
The Hutton report of 2004 was the outcome of an inquiry set up to examine ‘the circumstances surroun...
This article provides a detailed account of a largely neglected episode of Government intervention i...
The independent viability of the BBC from the government of the day has always been significantly a...
The thesis "Comparison of the BBC's Producers' guidelines and Editorial guidelines before and after ...
Charlie Beckett argues that the Savile scandal is not only damaging for the BBC’s reputation but als...
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University Lo...
Last month, MI5 Director General Andrew Parker appeared on BBC Radio 4 to make the case for intellig...
The revelations by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden have illustrated the scale and extent of digital...
On 19th January 2004, the UK government published An Independent Review of Government Communication...
The scandals which erupted within the BBC in November 2012 posed questions about the governance and ...
BBC boss Tony Hall has outlined his vision of the BBC’s future including the idea of everyone having...
The Hutton Inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the death of Dr David Kelly in 2003 shed a uni...
Studies of the relationship between ministers and the intelligence agencies have tended to focus on ...
Report on the inquiry, chaired by Lord Puttnam, that examined the future of public service televisi...