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Secrecy

International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences | 2008 | Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Secrecy

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Secrecy, according to sociologist Edward Shils, (19111995) is a form of concealment reinforced by sanctions against disclosure and differs from privacy in its non-voluntary character. In some societies, secrecy is concealment enforced by tacit and often religious proscriptions or taboos. In other societies, laws and statutes secure secrets and privileges for those who possess them. Regardless of how it is regulated, secrecy is implicated in the maintenance of religious or political hierarchies. Secrecy also plays an essential role in the internal division of groups by limiting access to knowledge.

In many instances, access to knowledge is regulated by membership associations or secret societies. Secret societies have been significant institutions in virtually all political cultures. For example, among the indigenous people of the Northwest Coast of North America, secret societies provided certain members of hereditary clans exclusive access to mythic, ritual, and political knowledge, which secured them against opposition from other clan members. Among many societies in Australia and Oceania, secret societies are associated with age grades and adult masculinity. Even when secret societies are open to all males, the societies must be entered through elaborate rites of initiation. Membership in such groups may then confer political and economic rights, as well as access to sacred or private historical knowledge.

In China, secret societies often emerged from mutual aid organizations, which represented and protected the interests of particular classes (peasant or aristocrat). Among the Straits Chinese in Southeast Asia, secret societies often worked to preserve language-based cultural traditions and mediated between diasporic and mainland groups, channeling resources and information between the groups. At various times, including revolutionary nationalist and communist wars, secret societies have provided crucial structures for organizing political activity.

Secret societies are associated both with the maintenance of legitimate power and the organization of oppositional movements. Insofar as secrecy is a principle that protects power, secrecy must both display itself and conceal the true nature of powers exclusivity. In other words, political secrecy is public secrecy; people must be led to believe that there is something that they do not know, and that this something underwrites others power. Hence, secrecy is often associated with elaborate rituals and formalized communicational codes. This is true not only for the infamous sects of esoteric knowledgesuch as the cults of Mithra in ancient Greece and the Rosicrucians and Masons or Opus Dei in the Christian traditionbut it also characterizes membership in contemporary political parties and groups such as the Ku Klux Klan in the United States.

The development of secrecy is intensified and accelerated in the context of the state, both in its pre-modern and its modern, bureaucratic forms. The idea that states should withhold knowledge from subjects on the grounds that it would harm them has a long history. This idea can be found in Platos Republic, book 2, where it is suggested that tales of gods warring with gods or performing immoral acts ought to be banned as the subject of poetry, lest these acts encourage similar behavior in humans. In City of God book 2, Augustine appraised the Christian church over the Pagan religions precisely because it claimed to oppose a politics of secrecy with a doctrine of universal truth. Nonetheless, state officials within the nations influenced by Christianity never relinquished the practice of secrecy as the basis of powerany more than did those inspired by other theologies.

Both the nature and theory of secrecy received impetus from the institutional and technological developments of modernity. In the nineteenth century, secrecy came to be thought of not only as a phenomenon within society but as an essential principle of social groups in general. German social theorist Georg Simmel (18581916) referred to secrecy as one of humanitys greatest achievements. Simmels concept, on which Shils built his more elaborate definition, emphasized purposive aggression against a third person. According to Simmel, the concept and phenomenon of secrecy revealed society to be a formation based not on dyadic relations but on the spectral presence of the third person. By third person, he meant to encompass the total social formation, beyond those with whom one might have dialogic relationsincluding all those who precede one in history, and all who may come after, but especially those against whom one might forge an oppositional solidarity.

From Simmels perspective, the value of the secret is intensified by the possibility of its betrayal or revelation. Simmel also remarked that as societies become more complex, what is public becomes ever more public, and what is private becomes ever more private. A crucial development in this perspective is the emergence of writing and, more specifically, the epistolary form of letter writing, in which writing is linked to the idea of privacy. In the letter, the exclusion of others is simultaneously bureaucratized and made to appear as a necessary condition of interpersonal intimacy.

In German political economist and sociologist, Max Webers (18641920) writings, the link between bureaucracy and secrecy is both explicit and mutually sustaining. According to Weber, bureaucracies produce their relative superiority and claims on professional exclusivity by developing secret knowledge. Hence, while democratic capitalist societies generally presume and espouse the value of openness and transparency, they are increasingly subject to the force of secrecy. In his magisterial work, Economy and Society, Weber went so far as to claim that the official secret is the specific invention of bureaucracy. Weber also claimed that secrecy was doomed to fail, as the expert knowledge of private economic interest groups would ultimately come to supplant that of governmental elites.

Webers sense that government secrecy would ultimately give way to the regime of expert knowledge and, hence, corporate trade secrets has in some senses been realized to the extent that copyright and patent laws dominate the landscape of secrecy legislation. However, in recent years practices of state secrecy have expanded rather than diminished in the United Statesdespite the anticipation of state secrecy declining following the end of the cold war. (Similar developments have also been seen elsewhere.) According to the U.S. Information Security Oversight Office, acts of original classification (the secreting of primary documents, including top secret, secret, and confidential materials) decreased in 1995 by more than 36,000 to 167,840. However, that number increased to 258,633 by 2005. Moreover, derivative classifications, materials classified because they include citations of, or reference to, classified documents, increased at an even greater rate. In 1995, reported derivative classifications had decreased by almost 1.2 million to 3,411,665. In 2005, derivative classifications had grown to 13,948,140.

These figures reveal a general trend in the early twenty-first century of an increase in the production of state secrets and an expansion of their sphere of circulation. The latter fact, which derives largely from new digital technologies, enhances the aura of secrecy while the former consolidates the power derived from it.

The result is a doubled development. On the one hand, there are more secrets and more people who are aware that there are more secrets. On the other, fewer and fewer people are authorized to know the content of those secrets. Thus, in the United States, for example, the number of people who are authorized to know and determine the status of government knowledge decreased in the decade between 1995 and 2005 by about 26 percent.

Mitigating the U.S. trends of expanding state secrets are constitutionally authorized mechanisms for accessing information. These mechanisms include acts and procedures gathered together under the title of Freedom of Information, by which the press and members of the public are entitled to petition for the declassification of documents. The United States also legislates the mandatory termination of classificatory protections, through statutes of limitations on copyrights and patents, as well as limits on government classifications. The 1997 U.S. Senates Report of the Commission on Protecting and Reducing Government Secrecy termed this built-in obsolescence of government secrecy the life-cycle of classification.

However, the legislated dissipation of secrecy protections is different from the mutual entailment of secrecy and revelation that Simmel had observed. Simmel was referring to the intensification of secrecy that comes about through the risk of its revelation. Such a logic can be seen in the transformation of military policies since 1993, when President William Jefferson Clinton signed Public Law 103160, commonly known as Dont ask, dont tell. This law promised to limit surveillance activities directed against gays and lesbians in the U.S. armed forces, but it also prohibited people who have same-sex relations from serving in the military. The law also proscribes homosexual and bisexual people who are in the military from revealing their sexual orientation. In 1994 the policies emanating from the law resulted in 617 discharges. That number increased steadily, and in 2001, 1,273 people were dismissed from the armed services. Although dismissals on the basis of sexuality dropped as the U.S. government commenced war after 9/11, dismissals rose again in 2005.

Shilss notion of the enforced secret reaches its apogee in the Dont ask, dont tell law. Moreover, the demand for the secreting of homosexuality in the military runs directly counter to the achievements of social movements over the course of the late twentieth century, at least in the Western nations. These movements had made sexual self-disclosure a foundational moment of self-liberation. Such achievements may have limited relevance in societies beyond the West. In the United States however, the logic of Dont ask, dont tell, appears to confirm Eve Kosofsky Sedgwicks thesis, as articulated in The Epistemology of the Closet. Sedgwick states that in modern Western societies the epistemological basis of power operates, as it does elsewhere, in the vacillation between secrecy and revelation but in modernity becomes increasingly focused on questions of sexuality and, more specifically, on the differentiation of populations into hetero and homosexual types.

Inverting the historical relationship between secrecy and power, the epistemology of the closet and the policy of Dont ask, dont tell makes the possession of a secret (homosexuality) a risk and a source of disenfranchisement. That this inversion takes place while older systems linking secrecy and power are extended and intensified by new technologies of encryption, duplication, and dissimulation, reveals that the classical theories of secrecy are themselves in need of transformation.

SEE ALSO Bureaucracy; Central Intelligence Agency, U.S.; Cold War; Corruption; Freedom of Information Act; Hot Money; Illuminati, The; Ku Klux Klan; National Security; Plato; Politics: Gay, Lesbian, Transgender, and Bisexual; Power; Sexual Orientation, Social and Economic Consequences; Sexuality; Weber, Max; Whistle-blowers

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Augustine. [c. 419] 1972. City of God. Trans. Henry Bettenson. London: Penguin.

The Commission on Protecting and Reducing Government Secrecy. 1997. Report of the Commission on Protecting and Reducing Government Secrecy, Senate Document 1052. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.

National Security Oversight Office. 1996. 1995 Report to the President. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration

Plato. [c. 360 BCE] 1930. The Republic. Trans. Paul Shorey, ed. G.P. Goold, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky. 1990. Epistemology of the Closet. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Shils, Edward A. 1956, reissued 1996. The Torment of Secrecy: The Background and Consequences of American Security Policies. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee.

Simmel, Georg, 1950. Secrecy and the Secret Society. In The Sociology of Georg Simmel. Trans. Kurt H. Wolff, 330344, and 345376. New York: Free Press.

Weber, Max. Bureaucracy, from Economy and Society [Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft], part III, pp. 650678. Excerpted in Gerth and Mills, From Max Weber: Essays in Sociology, 1964, pp.196244.

Rosalind C. Morris

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