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Main Authors: Borghoff, Uwe M., Berger, Lars, Fischer, François
Format: Preprint
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2312.17107
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author Borghoff, Uwe M.
Berger, Lars
Fischer, François
author_facet Borghoff, Uwe M.
Berger, Lars
Fischer, François
contents In fulfilling the European security commitment, the actors of the so-called "Intelligence Community" play a central role. They provide political and military decision-makers with important analyses and information. The Intelligence College in Europe (ICE) is the first entity to offer professional intelligence training as well as postgraduate level academic education in intelligence and security studies at a pan-European level. In developing its postgraduate provision, ICE has benefited from the experience of the German Master of Intelligence and Security Studies (MISS), which is a joint effort of the University of the Bundeswehr Munich and the Department of Intelligence at the Federal University of Administrative Sciences in Berlin. As a main contribution of this paper, the module Counterterrorism (adapted from the MISS) is examined in more detail as a case study of how postgraduate modules can be modified to speak to a pan-European audience of intelligence professionals.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2312_17107
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The Intelligence College in Europe (ICE): An Effort to Create a European Intelligence Community
Borghoff, Uwe M.
Berger, Lars
Fischer, François
Computers and Society
In fulfilling the European security commitment, the actors of the so-called "Intelligence Community" play a central role. They provide political and military decision-makers with important analyses and information. The Intelligence College in Europe (ICE) is the first entity to offer professional intelligence training as well as postgraduate level academic education in intelligence and security studies at a pan-European level. In developing its postgraduate provision, ICE has benefited from the experience of the German Master of Intelligence and Security Studies (MISS), which is a joint effort of the University of the Bundeswehr Munich and the Department of Intelligence at the Federal University of Administrative Sciences in Berlin. As a main contribution of this paper, the module Counterterrorism (adapted from the MISS) is examined in more detail as a case study of how postgraduate modules can be modified to speak to a pan-European audience of intelligence professionals.
title The Intelligence College in Europe (ICE): An Effort to Create a European Intelligence Community
topic Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2312.17107