In South Africa's democracy, the civilian intelligence agency's power has been weaponized to spy on political rivals, the media and civil society, while oversight institutions largely falter. As inquiries into Jacob Zuma's presidency opened doors for intelligence reform, Cyril Ramaphosa's administration has, at important moments, offered superficial fixes, entrenching state control.
Jane Duncan is Professor of Digital Society at the University of Glasgow, holds a British Academy Global Professorship and is Visiting Professor in the Department of Communication and Media, University of Johannesburg. She is the author of The Rise of the Securocrats (2014) and Stopping the Spies (2018).
Innehållsförteckning
Preface Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter 1 Understanding intelligence accountability: towards a critical approachChapter 2 Race to the bottom: expanding intelligence in an international contextChapter 3 Accountability theatre: how intelligence oversight can be set up to fail Chapter 4 Undercover abuses: human intelligence and covert counterintelligence Chapter 5 Public oversight in action: reining in communication surveillance Chapter 6 Repairing state power: intelligence accountability under Cyril RamaphosaConclusion: Rethinking intelligence accountability NotesReferences
Peter Vale, Chris Oxtoby, Eusebius McKaiser, Chris Landsberg, Peter Hudson, Mark Heywood, Daryl Glaser, Mark Gevisser, Jane Duncan, Steven Friedman, Richard Calland
Edward Webster, Vincent Siwawa, Ujala Satgoor, Constantine N Nana, Seipati Mokhema, Alex Mohubetswane Mashilo, Michael Kwet, Rok Kranjc, Jane Duncan, Mayssam Daaboul, Ruth Castel-Branco, Michel Bauwens, Vishwas Satgar
Peter Vale, Chris Oxtoby, Eusebius McKaiser, Chris Landsberg, Peter Hudson, Mark Heywood, Daryl Glaser, Mark Gevisser, Jane Duncan, Steven Friedman, Richard Calland