The State of Secrecy: Spies and the Media in Britain
Autor Richard Norton-Tayloren Limba Engleză Paperback – 6 sep 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350381933
ISBN-10: 1350381934
Pagini: 352
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350381934
Pagini: 352
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Offers insights from Richard Norton-Taylor's rare access to a wide array of defence sources, as well as his forty-year career as a journalist covering the world of intelligence, espionage, spies and their masters in Whitehall.
Notă biografică
Richard Norton-Taylor writes for the Guardian on defence and security and the paper's Security Editor. He joined the Guardian in 1973 as the newspaper's first European correspondent based in Brussels and returned to Britain in 1975 to report on issues of intelligence and security. He won the Freedom of Information Campaign Award in 1986 and in 1994, and Liberty's Human Rights Award for journalism in 2010. He currently co-edits the Guardian Defence and Security blog and is a regular broadcaster.
Cuprins
Introduction1. Heroes and Hacks2. Poachers and Gamekeepers3. City of Myths and Contradictions 4. Culture and Language of Secrecy5. Secrecy Obsessed6. History is an Official Secret 7. Spies - 18. Spies - 29. Provoking Terror10. Chilcot Redux11. Defending the Past 12. Defending the Future
Recenzii
An entertaining and timely book, written by a fine reporter who has made a habit of speaking unwelcome truth to power.
Fans of Norton-Taylor's reporting will enjoy The State of Secrecy, which reprises and updates his admirably determined efforts on these and other topics. Vivid vignettes depict the blunders and quirks of the secret world. He excoriates attempts to suborn friendly journalists with thrills and scoops, and to smear or bully those who write "unhelpful" articles.
A lifetime of experience in why, when and how officials prevaricate or lie has trained [Norton-Taylor] to make proper use of an investigative journalist's best source: the leak.
When it comes to matters of defence and security Norton-Taylor is probably Britain's most perceptive, persistent and best informed commentator . He has succeeded (in exposing the mindset which encourages the fetishisation of official secrecy) brilliantly.
Readable, well-structured ... [A] well-timed book.
Lively and revealing.
A hugely welcome contribution from Richard Norton-Taylor . providing a richly informed discussion of the relationship between the British security system and the press.
In a finely written memoir that every student and observer of British politics and journalism must read, Norton-Taylor rightly identifies secrecy as the British disease which stifles and undermines democracy in this country. It's a classic of telling truth to power from a formidable journalist of real integrity. Uniquely, among British journalists, Norton-Taylor had access to sources at the highest levels of the civil service and the intelligence services but didn't fall for their blandishments and lies. Often faced with deliberate official obstruction and, sometimes, employer indifference, he doggedly pursued stories when the media circus had moved on. In forensic detail and with controlled anger Norton-Taylor revisits the stories, scandals and events which have now drifted back into history but which illustrate the enduring power of secrecy to deny citizens access to truth.
Fans of Norton-Taylor's reporting will enjoy The State of Secrecy, which reprises and updates his admirably determined efforts on these and other topics. Vivid vignettes depict the blunders and quirks of the secret world. He excoriates attempts to suborn friendly journalists with thrills and scoops, and to smear or bully those who write "unhelpful" articles.
A lifetime of experience in why, when and how officials prevaricate or lie has trained [Norton-Taylor] to make proper use of an investigative journalist's best source: the leak.
When it comes to matters of defence and security Norton-Taylor is probably Britain's most perceptive, persistent and best informed commentator . He has succeeded (in exposing the mindset which encourages the fetishisation of official secrecy) brilliantly.
Readable, well-structured ... [A] well-timed book.
Lively and revealing.
A hugely welcome contribution from Richard Norton-Taylor . providing a richly informed discussion of the relationship between the British security system and the press.
In a finely written memoir that every student and observer of British politics and journalism must read, Norton-Taylor rightly identifies secrecy as the British disease which stifles and undermines democracy in this country. It's a classic of telling truth to power from a formidable journalist of real integrity. Uniquely, among British journalists, Norton-Taylor had access to sources at the highest levels of the civil service and the intelligence services but didn't fall for their blandishments and lies. Often faced with deliberate official obstruction and, sometimes, employer indifference, he doggedly pursued stories when the media circus had moved on. In forensic detail and with controlled anger Norton-Taylor revisits the stories, scandals and events which have now drifted back into history but which illustrate the enduring power of secrecy to deny citizens access to truth.