Difference between revisions of "Joan Hoey"

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[[Joan Hoey]] works for the Economist Intelligence Unit and used the pseudonym Joan Phillips when she wrote for the [[LM network]].
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[[Joan Hoey]] used the pseudonym Joan Phillips when she wrote for the [[LM network]]. She wrote a series of articles for [[LM]] Magazine throughout the 1990s questioning Serb nationalist atrocities. She was director of the [[London International Research Exchange]] [http://www.monbiot.com/archives/1998/11/01/far-left-or-far-right/].
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Before joining the Economist Intelligence Unit in 1995, Joan worked as a freelance journalist and analyst covering Eastern Europe.<ref>Economist Intelligence Unit [http://www.eiuresources.com/mediadir/default.asp?Criteria=FullName&Locator=WORLD&SearchTerm=%20&TopName=Joan%20Hoey Analyst details], accessed February 2007.</ref>
  
She wrote a series of articles for [[LM]] Magazine throughout the 1990s questioning Serb nationalist atrocities. She was director of the [[London International Research Exchange]] [http://www.monbiot.com/archives/1998/11/01/far-left-or-far-right/] and works as the [[Economist Intelligence Unit]]'s Balkans analyst.
 
  
 
Latterly Hoey turned up as an associate of the Centre for Defence & International Security Studies, at Lancaster University. The Institute is described by Charlie Pottins:
 
Latterly Hoey turned up as an associate of the Centre for Defence & International Security Studies, at Lancaster University. The Institute is described by Charlie Pottins:
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The programme is headed by Colonel Richard Cousens, former Director of Defence Studies for the British Army, described as "a Counter Revolutionary Warfare specialist with practical experience as an infantry officer. He completed seven operational tours in Northern Ireland with the Light Infantry and served in Hong Kong and Brunei with the Gurkhas. He led the Counter Insurgency instructional team at the British Army Staff College and has studied the relationship between Peacekeeping and Counter Revolutionary Warfare theory. He has had command experience in the counter insurgency environment as a platoon, company and battalion commander."
 
The programme is headed by Colonel Richard Cousens, former Director of Defence Studies for the British Army, described as "a Counter Revolutionary Warfare specialist with practical experience as an infantry officer. He completed seven operational tours in Northern Ireland with the Light Infantry and served in Hong Kong and Brunei with the Gurkhas. He led the Counter Insurgency instructional team at the British Army Staff College and has studied the relationship between Peacekeeping and Counter Revolutionary Warfare theory. He has had command experience in the counter insurgency environment as a platoon, company and battalion commander."
 
All of this must make him just the man to impress one of the Centre's associates, Joan Hoey, of the Economist Intelligence Unit.. As "Joan Philips" she was a leading member of the Revolutionary Communist Party, "Living Marxism's Balkan expert (who ridiculed the idea that Serb nationalists had massacred thousands of people), and secretary of the RCP's front Campaign Against Militarism. Unfortunately the list of members and associates seems to have disappeared from the CDSS website, but when I last saw it, most of her fellow associates appeared to be former NATO and allied military personnel. Hoey and her comrades used to sneer at "laptop bombardiers". Now she can rub shoulders happily with real brigadiers. In 2004 CDISS moved to Henley on Thames. Hoey is no longer mentioned on its website (January 2006).   
 
All of this must make him just the man to impress one of the Centre's associates, Joan Hoey, of the Economist Intelligence Unit.. As "Joan Philips" she was a leading member of the Revolutionary Communist Party, "Living Marxism's Balkan expert (who ridiculed the idea that Serb nationalists had massacred thousands of people), and secretary of the RCP's front Campaign Against Militarism. Unfortunately the list of members and associates seems to have disappeared from the CDSS website, but when I last saw it, most of her fellow associates appeared to be former NATO and allied military personnel. Hoey and her comrades used to sneer at "laptop bombardiers". Now she can rub shoulders happily with real brigadiers. In 2004 CDISS moved to Henley on Thames. Hoey is no longer mentioned on its website (January 2006).   
 
Before joining the Economist Intelligence Unit in 1995, Joan worked as a freelance journalist and analyst covering Eastern Europe.<ref>Economist Intelligence Unit [http://www.eiuresources.com/mediadir/default.asp?Criteria=FullName&Locator=WORLD&SearchTerm=%20&TopName=Joan%20Hoey Analyst details], accessed February 2007.</ref>
 
  
 
She is sister of former Labour minister [[Kate Hoey]].
 
She is sister of former Labour minister [[Kate Hoey]].

Revision as of 17:25, 2 May 2010

Joan Hoey used the pseudonym Joan Phillips when she wrote for the LM network. She wrote a series of articles for LM Magazine throughout the 1990s questioning Serb nationalist atrocities. She was director of the London International Research Exchange [1].

Before joining the Economist Intelligence Unit in 1995, Joan worked as a freelance journalist and analyst covering Eastern Europe.[1]


Latterly Hoey turned up as an associate of the Centre for Defence & International Security Studies, at Lancaster University. The Institute is described by Charlie Pottins: another interesting part of the CDISS is a programme on "revolutionary warfare and counter-insurgency". In my day blimps and "Daily Telegraph " readers would have had a fit if someone told them Lancaster had fostered a department teaching "revolutionary warfare"'! But times change, and this programme aims " to identify the successes and failures of strategies and tactics deployed against revolutionaries and terrorists by democratic states and to make recommendations for both the present and the future". The programme is headed by Colonel Richard Cousens, former Director of Defence Studies for the British Army, described as "a Counter Revolutionary Warfare specialist with practical experience as an infantry officer. He completed seven operational tours in Northern Ireland with the Light Infantry and served in Hong Kong and Brunei with the Gurkhas. He led the Counter Insurgency instructional team at the British Army Staff College and has studied the relationship between Peacekeeping and Counter Revolutionary Warfare theory. He has had command experience in the counter insurgency environment as a platoon, company and battalion commander." All of this must make him just the man to impress one of the Centre's associates, Joan Hoey, of the Economist Intelligence Unit.. As "Joan Philips" she was a leading member of the Revolutionary Communist Party, "Living Marxism's Balkan expert (who ridiculed the idea that Serb nationalists had massacred thousands of people), and secretary of the RCP's front Campaign Against Militarism. Unfortunately the list of members and associates seems to have disappeared from the CDSS website, but when I last saw it, most of her fellow associates appeared to be former NATO and allied military personnel. Hoey and her comrades used to sneer at "laptop bombardiers". Now she can rub shoulders happily with real brigadiers. In 2004 CDISS moved to Henley on Thames. Hoey is no longer mentioned on its website (January 2006).

She is sister of former Labour minister Kate Hoey.

Contact details

  • The Court House
  • Northfield End
  • Henley-on-Thames
  • Oxfordshire
  • RG9 2JN
  • Tel: +44 (0) 1491 843134Fax: +44 (0) 1491 412082
  • Email: info@cdiss.org
  • Internet: http://www.cdiss.org/

Notes

  1. Economist Intelligence Unit Analyst details, accessed February 2007.