Mils Hills

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Mils Hills is a propaganda operative who claims he was the first Anthropologist to join the Ministry of Defence and then the Cabinet Office. His background is in Information Opreations and at the Cabinat Office he helped to set up the [[[Civil Contingencies Secretariat]] in the aftermath of September 11 2001.

A biographical note reads:

Having read for a doctorate in the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of St. Andrews, Mils joined the Centre for Human Sciences of the Defence Evaluation and Research Agency (DERA) of the UK Ministry of Defence in 1998. Initially contributing technical input to Information Operations research, he rapidly came to be deployed on a range of research and consultancy activies across the organisation. In 2000 Mils was appointed Task Manager and in the following year Capability Group Leader as DERA moved towards privatisation (as QinetiQ). Mils left QinetiQ in 2002, and joined DERA's successor organisation the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (DSTL). At the same time, Mils was seconded to the Civil Contingencies Secretariat of the Cabinet Office.
Mils has also served as a member of the Department of Trade and Industry Taskforce on Future Society and Crime and Secretary of a Defence Scientific Advisory Committee Working Party on Information Operations and Information Technology.[1]

Views

Hills is somewhat sceptical about those arguments which value truth and authenticity over simulacra and simulation. While at the Cabinet Office Hills reviewed a book about Japanese cultural displays:

Fascinating questions are raised as to the nature of experience, and why it is that it is so easy and conventional for the West to privilege the real over the faithfully authentic. If we as visitors to any attraction or cultural site (museum, theatre, mall) can extract meaning, enjoyment, and reaction from it, then the issue of associating any authenticity with an originary real is essentially nonsensical. So much of history is comprised of ‘mights’ (Shakespeare might have eaten here) that the replication – or cloning! – of Shakespeare’s birthplace in Japan ensures that the experience that a Japanese visitor has in Japan’s replica is at least as authentic as that in Stratford.[2]

Publications

  • Command Post Infrastructure: Equipping the decision-maker (with R Holloway) Command Post of the Future II: Future Command HQ, The Hatton, London, 20th November 2002.
  • Info Ops, Asymmetry & Learning: Some Practical Concepts to Address the Challenge Information Operations Course, RAF Chicksands, 18 October 2002
  • Competing the particular dreads of chemicals National Focus for Chemical Incidents, Cardiff 3rd October 2002
  • The Formal and Informal Management of Diversity in Mauritius Social Identities, Volume 8, No. 2, June 2002
  • Competing to Control the Media in an Age of Asymmetric Warfare (with Rachel Holloway) Jane's Intelligence Review, May 2002 Abstract, Extract
  • Competing Against A Particular Dread: Novel ideas to counter panic generation NATO-Russia Advanced Scientific Workshop on Social and Psychological Consequences of Chemical and Biological Terrorism, March 27 2002 NATO HQ: Brussels
  • Fighting the Future: Social Science Contributions to the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence Conference on Contemporary Research on Terrorism and Political Violence, Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence, St Andrews 28-29 November 2000
  • The Psychology of Future Warfare: Asymmetric Risk and Decision-taking (with JP MacIntosh) Cyberwar 3.0, AFCEA International Press, January 2001[3]

Contact

Mphills AT dstl.gov.uk Mils.hills AT cabinet-office.x.gsi.gov.uk

Notes

  1. Applications of Anthropology: An Exotic Input to the Defence and Security Community Dr Mils Hills, The Cabinet Office, Ministry of Defence, University of Loughborough, Abstracts, accessed 28 May 2009
  2. Mils Hills (2002) Review of Joy Hendry. 2000. The Orient Strikes Back: A Global View of Cultural Display. Materializing Culture. Oxford: Berg. Anthropological Theory, Vol 2(3): 3675-376
  3. Applications of Anthropology: An Exotic Input to the Defence and Security Community Dr Mils Hills, The Cabinet Office, Ministry of Defence, University of Loughborough, Abstracts, accessed 28 May 2009