The volume examines the effective involvement of British anti-terrorism efforts in European cooperation arrangements, which until now have been overshadowed by the UK-US โspecial relationshipโ and by political debates that overstate the divide between Britain and continental Europe. In arguing that British intelligence has always had a European dimension, it provides a distinct perspective to the study of intelligence cooperation and the role of British intelligence therein. Mobilizing a โfield theoryโ approach, the book provides an original contribution to the understanding of intelligence cooperation by investigating everyday bureaucratic practices of โground-levelโ security professionals and police forces, embedded in a European โfieldโ structured around the exchange of anti-terror intelligence. It also accounts for the drivers behind cooperation by using โfield analysis,โ which explains the trajectory and positioning of actors according to their โcapitalsโ rather than necessities dictated by threats or state decisions.
This book will be of much interest to students of Security Studies, International Political Sociology, Intelligence Studies, and International Relations in general.
Hager Ben Jaffel is a research associate at the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS-Cresppa/Labtop).