Ethics for Intelligence Professionals

Articulating the ethical foundations of the intelligence profession.

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Duration

1 day

Delivery mode

On campus

Location

UNSW Canberra City Campus

Standard price

$1045.00

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Overview

The moral philosopher Immanuel Kant described intelligence gathering (or, in his terminology, ‘spying’) as ‘that infernal art’. His disdain reflects a widespread belief: that there is something fundamentally unethical – or at least unsavoury – about intelligence work.

This course takes the opposite view, starting with the idea that there is a fundamental ethical basis for the intelligence profession by articulating the ethical foundations of the intelligence profession. Learners are then equipped with the conceptual and analytic tools to enable them to make ethical choices in the context of intelligence work.

This course begins by articulating the ethical foundations of the intelligence profession. Drawing on a ‘toolbox’ of ethics concepts and approaches, and a range of case studies, we then explore how the ethical intelligence professional can approach some of the more ethically challenging aspects of their role. These include dealing with the right to privacy, the employment of deception, and the ethical constraints on the recruitment of human sources.

Course content

In this course, you will cover the core topics of: 

  • Ethics Overview
  • The Ethical Basis of the Intelligence Profession
  • Privacy and Intelligence Gathering
  • The Ethics of Deception and Manipulation
  • Recruitment and Responsibility

Learning outcomes

Skills/competencies/knowledge that would be gained through this course:

By completing this course, learners will be able to:

  • Understand the central approaches to ethics.
  • Identify the central ethical challenges of intelligence work.
  • Define the ethical basis of the intelligence profession.
  • Analyse ethical challenges arising in intelligence work.
  • Devise well-justified yet practicable solutions to ethical dilemmas.

Who should attend

This course is designed for those entering, working in, or operating in conjunction with, intelligence roles.

Prerequisites

None


Facilitators

Dr Deane-Peter Baker

Dr Deane-Peter Baker is an Associate Professor in the School of Humanities and Social Science at UNSW Canberra, the faculty of the University of New South Wales contracted to deliver the undergraduate educational program for the Australian Defence Force Academy (ADFA). At UNSW Canberra he is co-Convenor (with Professor David Kilcullen) of the UNSW Canberra Future Operations Research Group, and Director of MERLIN (the Military Ethics Research Lab and Innovation Network – launching 2023).

He is also a Senior Visiting Research Fellow in the Kings College London Centre for Military Ethics. Dr Baker’s work focuses mainly on the ethics of armed conflict, and he is a regular consultant to Australia’s Special Operations Command as well as serving as one of two Ethics Fellows to the Australian War College. Recent publications include Should We Ban Killer Robots? (Polity Press 2022), Morality and Ethics at War: Bridging the Gaps Between the Soldier and the State (Bloomsbury Academic 2020), and The Ethics of Special Ops: Raids, Recoveries, Reconnaissance and Rebels (co-author with Roger Herbert and David Whetham, Cambridge University Press forthcoming 2023).

Dr Ned Dobos

Dr Ned Dobos is Senior Lecturer in International and Political studies at UNSW Canberra. He is the author of two books--Ethics, Security, and the War Machine: the True Cost of the Military (Oxford University Press 2020), and Insurrection and Intervention (Cambridge University Press 2012)--and his research has appeared in journals such as Philosophical Studies, Ethics and International Affairs, Journal of Applied Philosophy, Journal of Moral Philosophy, and International Studies Quarterly.

Dobos has held visiting appointments at the Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics at Oxford, the MacMillan Centre for International Studies at Yale, the McCoy Centre for Ethics at Stanford, and the philosophy department at Georgetown University. Currently he is Associate Director of the International Society for Military Ethics (Asia-Pacific chapter), a co-editor at the Australian Journal of Human Rights (Taylor and Francis), and associate editor of the Journal of Pacifism and Nonviolence (Brill).

Vedran ‘Maz’ Maslic

Vedran ‘Maz’ Maslic is a currently serving Major in the Australian Army Intelligence Corps. For much of his intelligence career, Vedran has focused on Source Operations where he deployed both as an advanced handler as well as an Officer in Charge of Human Intelligence teams. During an extended hiatus from the military, Vedran completed additional post-graduate studies and was an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of Gothenburg lecturing on interpersonal and intercultural communication.

Currently, Vedran is serving as the Chief Of Defence Force Research Fellow where he has commenced a PhD in military ethics. Additionally, he continues to instruct on the Source Operations, Interrogation and Psychological Operations as well as general intelligence courses at the Defence School of Intelligence with a particular focus on interpersonal and intercultural communication. Vedran is also the host of the increasingly popular podcast ‘The Voices Of War’.

Cancellation policy

Courses will be held subject to sufficient registrations. UNSW Canberra reserves the right to cancel a course up to five working days prior to commencement of the course. If a course is cancelled, you will have the opportunity to transfer your registration or be issued a full refund. If registrant cancels within 10 days of course commencement, a 50% registration fee will apply. UNSW Canberra is a registered ACT provider under ESOS Act 2000-CRICOS provider Code 00098G.