Board
of Research>>Tom Quiggin
Tom Quiggin is a 20 year veteran of the intelligence world and has worked
in an intelligence capacity for a number of agencies such as the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police, the International War Crimes Tribunal, the Privy
Council Office, Citizenship and Immigration Canada, the UN and the Canadian
Armed Forces. He is also a court qualified expert on jihadism. His area
of expertise as noted by the Court in 2005 was the “Structure, organization
and evolution of the global jihadist movement.” He has a recently completed
sole author book on national security intelligence requirements (Seeing
the Invisible: National Security Intelligence in an Uncertain World, Feb
2007). He has also written numerous book chapters and articles on security,
intelligence and terrorism in the UK, Germany, the Netherlands, The USA,
Singapore and Canada. He is currently an Adjunct Senior Fellow at the
S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, NTU, Singapore.
Books Published (Single Author)
National Security Intelligence in a Complex and Uncertain Age, Tom Quiggin,
World Scientific Press, Singapore (released in February 2007)
Book Chapters Contributed
1. Cutting the Cord: Economic Jihad and Canadian Oil. Edited by James
J.F. Forest. Westport, CT: Praeger Security International, (Anticipated
publication date: June, 2006)
2. Open Source Intelligence Support to Investigations in a Hostile Climate,
in La voir Canadienne vers la Cours pénale internationale: tous les chemins
mènent à Rome. The book was published by the Canadian Institute for the
Administration of Justice in spring 2004.
3. Intelligence and War Crimes: Some Views from Operational Experience.
This chapter was co-written with Joseph Rikhof, Special Counsel for War
Crimes (CIC and DOJ) and published in the book Canada and International
Humanitarian Law. Published by Centre for Foreign Policy Studies, Dalhousie
University, 2002.
4 The Role of Western European Regional Organizations in the Former Yugoslavia.
This chapter was contributed to book entitled The Changing European Security
Environment - Co-edited by Susanne Peters and C. Lott. This project was
organized by R. Seidelman and funded by the Volkswagen Group. Published
by Jena of Germany, 1996.
5. Peace at Last? An Analysis of the Dayton Agreement on Bosnia-Herzegovina
- This chapter formed the postscript for the above noted book by Peters
and Lott. 1996.
6. Technology for Peace: Enhancing the Effectiveness of Multinational
Interventions in Operations Other Than War. An edited volume organized
by Dr Jeremiah Sullivan of the University of Illinois. Funded by the United
States Institute for Peace. Personal contribution consists of a chapter
on the uses of technology in UN missions and the role of information warfare.
7. Janes/RUSI article in the Homeland Security and Resilience Monitor,
“People Power in the War on Terrorism” (June Issue – released on Janes’
website on 03 May 2006) Norman Vasu and Tom Quiggin.
8. Janes/RUSI article in the Homeland Security and Resilience Monitor
, “Scanning the horizon for threats to Singapore” (published date of 01
July 2006).
9. Janes/RUSI article in the Homeland Security and Resilience Monitor,
“Intelligence lessons: defeating terrorism on the front lines,” (March
2006)
10. The Royal United Services Institute Journal, Sept 2003, Iraq - A War
14 Years in the Making.
11. The Royal United Services Institute Journal, June 1999, Nato's Ten
Years of Muddle.
12. The Royal United Services Institute Journal, April/May 1999, Do Airstrikes
Amount to Effective Policy?
13. Internationale Spectator (Feb 98, No 2) Instituut Clingendael: Srebrenica
en de internationale gemeenschap in Bosnie (Srebrenica and the International
Community in Bosnia)
14. The International Security Review 1999, The Royal United Services
Institute for Defence Studies: Poets, Politicians and Propaganda in Kosovo
(Co-written with Lt Col Robert Williams of the Canadian Armed Forces)
15. Intelligence and National Security Journal, Vol 13, No 4, Winter 1998:
Response Article to No Cloak and Dagger Required, Intelligence Support
to UN Peacekeeping Missions
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