David Omand
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Most Influential Person Now
British civil servant, Director of GCHQ
Why Is David Omand Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Sir David Bruce Omand is a British former senior civil servant who served as the Director of the Government Communications Headquarters from 1996 to 1997. Background Omand was born on 15 April 1947. His father, Bruce, was a Justice of the Peace. Omand was educated at Glasgow Academy and Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, receiving an economics degree.
David Omand's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- Introducing Social Media Intelligence (SOCMINT) (2012) (121)
- Securing The State (2010) (115)
- Countering international terrorism: The use of strategy (2005) (49)
- Terrorism and the Law (2011) (33)
- An INS Special Forum: Implications of the Snowden Leaks (2014) (16)
- What Analysts Need to Understand: The King’s Intelligence Studies Program (2008) (15)
- A Democratic Licence to Operate: Report of the Independent Surveillance Review (2015) (13)
- Developing national resilience (2005) (12)
- Can we have the Pleasure of the Grin without Seeing the Cat? Must the Effectiveness of Secret Agencies Inevitably Fade on Exposure to the Light? (2008) (11)
- Towards the Discipline of Social Media Intelligence (2014) (9)
- Principled Spying: The Ethics of Secret Intelligence (2018) (8)
- Emergency planning, security and business continuity (2004) (7)
- Social Media Intelligence (SOCMINT) (2017) (6)
- The Cycle Of Intelligence (2013) (6)
- Understanding digital intelligence and the norms that might govern it (2015) (5)
- The Coastline of the Future: Some Limits on Forecasting and Prediction (2011) (4)
- The Ethical Limits We Should Place on Intelligence Gathering as Part of an Integrated CT Strategy (2021) (4)
- Understanding Digital Intelligence: A British View (2016) (3)
- The Dark Net Policing the Internet’s Underworld (2015) (3)
- Into the Future: A Comment on Agrell and Warner (2012) (3)
- Keeping Europe Safe. (2016) (3)
- Securing the State: National Security and Secret Intelligence (2013) (3)
- Nuclear deterrence in a changing world: The view from a UK perspective (1996) (3)
- What Should be the Limits of Western Counter-Terrorism Policy? (2015) (2)
- Why the British Government Must Invest in the Next Generation of Intelligence Analysts (2018) (2)
- Is it time to move beyond the Intelligence Cycle? A UK practitioner perspective (2013) (2)
- Reflections on Intelligence Analysts and Policymakers (2020) (2)
- The technoethics of contemporary intelligence practice (2021) (1)
- Understanding Digital Intelligence (2019) (1)
- Understanding Bayesian Thinking. Prior and Posterior Probabilities and Analysis of Competing Hypotheses in Intelligence Analysis (2014) (1)
- The authorised history of British defence economic intelligence (2020) (0)
- Spy time: the hunt for chronophages (2021) (0)
- What do we teach when we teach intelligence ethics? (2019) (0)
- The Route to Nuclear War (2019) (0)
- Why We Need Greater Professionalisation of the Craft of Intelligence Analysis: Creating Britain’s Intelligence Analysis College (2018) (0)
- Reflections on the 9/11 Decade (2011) (0)
- And another thing (2018) (0)
- Means and Methods of Modern Intelligence and theirwider implications (2019) (0)
- The safety of the realm in retrospect and prospect (2003) (0)
- How Many Schlesingers Would it Take to Change a Light-Bulb? (2009) (0)
- 0900 - 0945 Opening Key-note Panel: Delivering Resilience. Chair: Sir Paul Lever KCMG, Chairman, RUSI (2007) (0)
- The historical backdrop (2021) (0)
- Book reviews (2000) (0)
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