Recurring tensions between secrecy and democracy: Arguments on the Security Service in Dutch parliament, 1975-1995
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2016
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Abstract
There is a recurring tension between secrecy and democracy. This article analyzes the continually ambiguous relations between intelligence and security agencies and their parliamentary principals. I present a novel conceptual framework to analyze political relations influenced by secrecy. I draw on Albert Hirschman’s concepts of exit, voice and loyalty and Max Weber’s ideal types of the ethics of conviction and responsibility. The focus is a case study of the Dutch parliament and Security Service between 1975 and 1995. The analysis demonstrates how parliament can deal constructively with the secret services. This depends both on party-political responses to secrecy and strategic responses on the part of the secret services to deteriorating relationships with parliament.
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Braat, E C 2016, 'Recurring tensions between secrecy and democracy : Arguments on the Security Service in Dutch parliament, 1975-1995', Intelligence and National Security, vol. 31, no. 4, pp. 532-555. https://doi.org/10.1080/02684527.2015.1048991