Towards Sustainable Security Governance: Structural–Cognitive Integration for Hybrid Threat Analysis
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In the context of increasingly hybrid, nonlinear, and technologically mediated threats, security analytics has evolved into a core function of strategic decision-making rather than a subsidiary intelligence support tool. This paper examines the theoretical foundations, methodological challenges, and organizational dimensions of contemporary security analysis, with a focus on integrating structural (Clark) and cognitive (Heuer) paradigms. It examines the typology of analytical approaches—intelligence, forensic, and operational—while identifying the pervasive influence of cognitive biases, heuristics, and groupthink on analytical judgment. The study highlights the need for structured analytical methods such as the Analysis of Competing Hypotheses (ACH), scenario modeling, and red teaming to enhance analytical objectivity and decision reliability. Through a synthesis of theoretical models and institutional best practices, the article advocates for a systemic, reflexive, and integrated framework for security analytics—one that combines epistemological awareness, methodological rigor, and professional accountability to support sustainability in complex security environments.