𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

📁

Spying Through a Glass Darkly: The Ethics of Espionage and Counter-Intelligence

✍ Scribed by C�cile Fabre


Publisher
Oxford University Press, USA
Year
2022
Tongue
English
Leaves
264
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


C�cile Fabre draws back the curtain on the ethics of espionage and counterintelligence.

Espionage and counter-intelligence activities, both real and imagined, weave a complex and alluring story. Yet there is hardly any serious philosophical work on the subject. C�cile Fabre presents a systematic account of the ethics of espionage and counterintelligence. She argues that such
operations, in the context of war and foreign policy, are morally justified as a means, but only as a means, to protect oneself and third parties from ongoing violations of fundamental rights. In doing so, she addresses a range of ethical questions: are intelligence officers morally permitted to
bribe, deceive, blackmail, and manipulate as a way to uncover state secrets? Is cyberespionage morally permissible? Are governments morally permitted to resort to the mass surveillance of their and foreign populations as a means to unearth possible threats against national security? Can treason ever
be morally permissible? Can it ever be legitimate to resort to economic espionage in the name of national security? The book offers answers to those questions through a blend of philosophical arguments and historical examples.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Spying Through a Glass Darkly: The Ethics of Espionage and Counter-intelligence
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Contents
Introduction
1: Building blocks
1.1 Introduction
1.2 ‘Spiders’ Webs’: Classical Moral and Political Thought
1.3 Three Contemporary Approaches to Espionage
1.3.1 Dirty Hands
1.3.2 Contractarianism
1.3.3 Just War Theory
1.4 Foundations
1.4.1 Fundamental Rights
1.4.2 Defensive Harm
Justified Harm and Uncertainty
Defensive Harm and Institutions
Defensive Harm and Foreign Polic
1.5 Conclusion
2: Political Secrets
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Secrecy
2.2.1 Defining Secrecy
2.2.2 The Right to Secrecy
Rights-holders
The content of the right
Duties and duty-bearers
2.3 Security
2.3.1 The Argument
2.3.2 A Complication
2.4 Democratic Agency
2.4.1 The Argument
2.4.2 Secrecy and Democratic Accountability
2.4.3 Secrecy and Non-democratic Regimes
2.5 Conclusion
3: Defending Espionage
3.1 Introduction
3.2 The Permission to Spy
3.2.1 The Argument
3.2.2 Three Objections
3.3 The Duty to Spy
3.4 The Problem of Uncertainty
3.5 Between Allies—‘A Waste of Energy’?
3.6 Conclusion
4: Economic Espionage
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Economic Secrets
4.3 Justifying Economic Espionage
4.4 Objections
4.4.1 The Distributive Objection
4.4.2 The Motivations Objection
4.4.3 The Separate Spheres Objection
4.4.4 The ‘Not Between Allies’ Objection
4.5 Conclusion
5: Deception
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Concealing, Misleading, Lying, and Fabricating Evidence
5.3 Permissible Deception
5.3.1 Kant Revisited
5.3.2 Deception in Espionage and Counter-Intelligence: A First Cut
5.3.3 Deception in the Service of Unjust Ends
5.4 Mandatory Deception
5.5 Some Objections
5.6 Dilemmas of Deception
5.7 Conclusion
6: Treason
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Understanding Treason
6.2.1 Treason, Nationality, and Membership
6.2.2 The Presumptive Wrongfulness of Treason
6.3 Permissible Treason
6.4 Mandatory Treason
6.5 Treason and Unjust Ends
6.6 Treason, Alliances, and Shared Goals
6.7 Treason and Personal Betrayal
6.8 Conclusion
7: Recruitment
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Some Cases
7.3 The Problem of Motives
7.3.1 Motives and the Moral Status of Recruitment
7.3.2 Right and Wrong Motives
7.3.3 Benefiting from Wrong Motives
7.4 The Problem of Manipulation
7.4.1 Manipulation
7.4.2 Non-deceptive Manipulation
7.4.3 Deceptive Manipulation
7.5 The Problem of Exploitation
7.5.1 Exploitation
7.5.2 Exploiting the Innocent
7.5.3 Exploiting the Guilty
7.6 The Problem of Coercion
7.6.1 Coercion
7.6.2 Threats of Punishment
7.6.3 Informational Blackmail
7.6.4 Entrapment
7.7 Conclusion
8: Technology
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Mapping the Terrain
8.3 Of Machines and Humans
8.3.1 Eyes and Ears vs Lenses and Bugs
8.3.2 State Officials, Diplomats, Spies, and Company Executives
8.4 Cyber-intelligence
8.4.1 Cyber-espionage
8.4.2 Cyber-counter-intelligence
8.5 Conclusion
9: Mass surveillance
9.1 Introduction
9.2 A Putative Defence of Mass Surveillance
9.3 The Privacy Objection
9.3.1 Defining Privacy
9.3.2 The Objection
9.3.3 Unintended Effects and Intentional Disclosure
The Argument from Unintended Effects
The argument from intentional disclosure
9.3.4 Privacy and the Duty to Protect
9.4 The Fairness Objection
9.4.1 Algorithmic Unfairness
9.4.2 Profiling
9.5 Conclusion
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Spying Through a Glass Darkly: The Ethic
✍ Cécile Fabre 📂 Library 📅 2022 🏛 Oxford University Press 🌐 English

<span><strong>Cécile Fabre draws back the curtain on the ethics of espionage and counterintelligence.</strong><br><br>Espionage and counter-intelligence activities, both real and imagined, weave a complex and alluring story. Yet there is hardly any serious philosophical work on the subject. Cécile F

Spying Through A Glass Darkly: The Ethic
✍ Cécile Fabre 📂 Library 📅 2022 🏛 Oxford University Press 🌐 English

Cécile Fabre draws back the curtain on the ethics of espionage and counterintelligence. Espionage and counter-intelligence activities, both real and imagined, weave a complex and alluring story. Yet there is hardly any serious philosophical work on the subject. Cécile Fabre presents a systematic acc

Spying Through a Glass Darkly: American
✍ David Alvarez; Eduard Mark 📂 Library 📅 2016 🏛 University Press of Kansas 🌐 English

<p>For the period between World War II and the full onset of the Cold War, histories of American intelligence seem to go dark. Yet in those years a little known clandestine organization, the Strategic Services Unit (SSU), emerged from the remnants of wartime American intelligence to lay the groundwo

Through a Glass Darkly: Ethnic Semiosis
✍ William Q. Boelhower 📂 Library 📅 1993 🏛 Oxford University Press Inc 🌐 English

Drawing on texts ranging from Chief Joseph's 1887 speech and Henry James' "The American Scene" to Maya Angelou's "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings", this study pursues new paths of ethnic inquiry in the context of semiotics. The author focuses on the question: "Who can predict when the ethnic differe