Jump to content

User:Gego/Public Intelligence Draft v001

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Public Intelligence Article Draft (Sept. 2010)

v00.01

Though the term is nowhere categorically defined, Public Intelligence is one of the many terms for the individual gathering and evaluation process for information. Public refers both to the free accessibility of the information and the individual citizen as a group of initiators. Intelligence refers to the concept of organized information gathering and the political intelligence of citizens.

Definitions and Categorizations

Public intelligence refers to sources of information freely available to the individual to be the basis for it's role as a responsible and critical citizen as part of a group or state. -Gernot Hausar, 2003

Public Intelligence is associated with the application of Open source intelligence (OSInt) to empower the public in its dealings with all forms of organization, and most especially government. It is an applied variant of Collective intelligence.

"Intelligence must accept the end of its special status in the American government, and take on the task of informing the public of its nature and its activities as any other department or agency. . . . By far the most effective manner of accomplishing the task . . . is by letting the public benefit directly from the products of intelligence, its information and assessments. " --former DCI William Colby, Honorable Men: My Life in the CIA, Simon & Schuster, 1978, pp. 459-60.

See also

  • Public Intelligence (disambiguation)
  • Intelligence (information gathering)
  • Business intelligence
  • Competitive intelligence
  • Criminal intelligence
  • Marketing intelligence
  • Military intelligence
  • Police Intelligence
  • Intelligence agency

Literature

Sources containing the term public intelligence listed after year of publication.

  • Seda Eldrige, Public Intelligence - A Study of the attitudes and opinions of voters, Bulletin of the University of Kansas, 1935
  • William Colby, Honorable Men: My Life in the CIA, Simon & Schuster, 1978, pp. 459-60.
  • Mitcham, C., Justifying public participation in technical decision making, Technology and Society Magazine, IEEE, Volume: 16, Issue: 1, Spring 1997.
  • Reid, Herbert G., Taylor, Betsy, John Dewey's Aesthetic Ecology of Public Intelligence and the Grounding of Civic Environmentalism, Ethics & the Environment - Volume 8, Number 1, Spring 2003, pp. 74-92
  • Hastedt, Glenn. Public Intelligence Paper presented at the annual meeting of the The Midwest Political Science Association, Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, Illinois, Apr 15, 2004 Online <.PDF>. 2006-10-05 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p84487_index.html>
  • Robert David Steele, The Smart Nation Act: Public Intelligence in the Public Interest, 2006, pp250.
  • Bob Hoogenboom (2006): Grey intelligence. From Crime, Law and Social Change, Volume 45, Numbers 4-5, 373-381, "Re-visiting the Informal Economy. Guest Editors: Ronnie Lippens & Paul Ponsaers". Springerlink