Detailed Description
Title
Secrecy in an Open Society
Department(s)
Political Science
Philosophy
Philosophy
Creator(s)
Advisor(s)
Date of Original
6/1/2011
Description
This thesis explores the difficult task of finding a balance of secrecy and openness in America. The common notion is that America is an open society; however, with an intelligence community predicated upon secrecy, an imbalance of power between the Executive and Congress, a media which does not always report objective news, and a complacent American public, openness ultimately becomes more difficult to maintain. To find a balance, I propose a hypothetical spectrum of openness in which there is a straight line with two endpoints- one endpoint representing complete secrecy, the other complete openness. I argue that both ends of the spectrum are extreme and undesirable and that America's goal should be to err on the side of more openness while maintaining responsible secrecy. By responsible secrecy, I mean secrecy that is justified under legitimate national security grounds whereby if the secret is leaked, American security interests are in jeopardy. To find the right balance, a number of factors must work together to promote openness: Congress, the Executive, the media, the intelligence community, and the American people.
Genre
thesis
Publisher of Digital Record
Union College Schaffer Library Digital Projects
Source
Union College Schaffer Library Special Collections
Contact Information
Union College Schaffer Library Special Collections, 807 Union St., Schenectady, NY 12308; 518-388-6620; https://www.union.edu/schaffer-library
Harmful Language Statement
Language
English