ABSTRACT

This chapter outlines how intelligence-led policing (ILP) is shaped by, and helps shape, the moral challenges connected with global policing. It examines the risk indicators of the agency's 'common integrated risk analysis model' and explores how its definitions of risks and threats are influenced by state security, rather than that of human beings. The chapter discusses the decision-making processes on the ground in joint operations and explores how guest officers negotiate the co-production of the data they use, by gathering different types of information in joint operations and at home. It also presents Frontex and its intelligence activities. Frontex aims to systematically achieve more efficient border controls in tandem with the "highest possible standard" of border policing. The chapter then explores what is made accountable and visible as risks, threats and uncertainty in the agency's formal risk analysis model, common integrated risk analysis model (CIRAM).