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022 _a1756 - 851X
040 _aES-MaBCA
_cES-MaBCA
100 _95228
_aJones, Chris
245 _aThe visible hand
_cChris Jones
_h[Recurso electrónico]PDF
_b: the European Union’s Security Industrial Policy
260 _aLondon
_bStatewatch European Monitoring
_cAugust 2016
300 _a25 p.
_g233 KB.
490 _aStatewatch Analysis
_vNo. 297
520 _aThe European Commission has been working for some time to “enhance growth and increase employment in the EU's security industry” through projects launched under the 2012 ‘Security Industrial Policy’ (SIP). While estimates of the actual size of the security industry vary, the EU hopes it will provide more “jobs and growth” and help ensure the implementation of EU and national security policies. The EU’s initiatives in security are wide-ranging, but they frequently dovetail with the interests of major security and defence companies: tools for mass data-gathering and predictive analytics, continent-wide surveillance systems and databases, the increasing use of biometrics in all walks of life, and the closer integration of public authorities and private industry.... An examination of the paper trail surrounding the SIP and the initiatives it has spawned serves to highlight some of the ways in which the EU is seeking to help these companies achieve “profitable businesses”, and how the foundations for the EU’s security project are being laid.
610 _91645
_aUnión Europea
650 0 _9960
_aSeguridad
650 0 _914330
_aIndustria
651 0 _91574
_aPaíses de la Unión Europea
856 4 _qPDF
_uhttp://www.statewatch.org/analyses/no-297-security-industrial-policy.pdf
942 _2udc
_cART
999 _c18439
_d18442