National Intelligence College publications advance intelligence scholarship, academic inquiry, and professional dialogue across the Intelligence Community.
Since its founding in 1996, the former NIU established itself as a major source for the IC of intelligence scholarship blended with academic insights. Our publications have become mainstays in IC classrooms and serve as indispensable tools for analysts, collectors, and others seeking new outlooks and better ways to accomplish the intelligence mission.
Publications were published work of faculty, research fellows, students, and IC professionals. Authors were encouraged to introduce new perspectives on topics of critical interest to the IC and, more broadly, the US Government.
Books published underwent peer review by colleagues in the US Government, as well as from civilian academic, nonprofit, or business communities. Authors of publications enjoyed full academic freedom, provided they did not disclose classified information, jeopardize operations security, or misrepresent official US policy. Such academic freedom empowered authors to offer new and sometimes controversial perspectives in the interest of furthering debate on key issues.
Publications were approved for unrestricted distribution by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence’s prepublication review. The views expressed in each publication were those of the author and did not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any US Government agency.
Research monographs provide extended analysis on intelligence, national security, technology, strategy, and policy topics for professional and academic audiences.
Research Monograph
A focused study on warning, strategic surprise, and the analytical demands of modern intelligence.
An examination of technology-driven change and its implications for intelligence collection and analysis.
A professional analysis of how intelligence informs policy, planning, and operational judgment.
A study of counterintelligence challenges in an increasingly networked and contested environment.
An exploration of intelligence support before, during, and after periods of crisis.
A look at analytic standards, professional education, and institutional adaptation.
Research Shorts and Notes are brief publications that provide timely analysis, commentary, and professional insight on current intelligence and national security topics.
Research Short
A concise look at cognitive warfare and its relationship to strategic competition.
An overview of open-source methods and geospatial intelligence applications.
Research Note
A short analysis of intelligence consumption, collaboration, and information-sharing practices.
A brief examination of culture-general knowledge and its operational value.
A concise assessment of conflict, regional risk, and global energy considerations.
A perspective on analytic posture, institutional assumptions, and China-focused intelligence.
A short reflection on complexity, cognition, and intelligence analysis.
A brief examination of academic theory and cyber strategy implementation.
Practical considerations for organizational change across complex intelligence institutions.
Books published by the NIC Press support intelligence education and professional development through peer-reviewed scholarship and practitioner-focused research.
Hasenjager, Bailey, and Fefferman
James Marchio
Kevin P. Riehle
Stacey E. Pollard and Lawrence A. Kuznar
John A. Gentry and William M. Nolte
John P. Caves, Jr. and W. Seth Carus
Russell G. Swenson and Carolina Sancho Hirane
CAPT Erich M. Telfer, USCG