The cease-fire of August 1994, in Northern Ireland, has held for sufficiently long to raise the prospect of a permanent peace. Peace in Northern Ireland should be valued and cherished in its own right, because it restores to life, a normalcy that most other societies take for granted. But, it would be a mistake to view peace as offering a glorious opportunity for economic development. Instead, it would be more realistic to see the permanent end of political violence as one less constraint inhibiting the process of economic development in Northern Ireland. In the absence of the constraint that the Troubles imposed upon the Northern Ireland economy, the province's economic problems are slightly more tractable, but they continue, neverthe...
At the beginning the paper presents a brief historic outline of the conflict. It describes the strif...
For a peace process in Ireland to succeed it will require an active transition away from the underly...
This paper argues that the partition of Ireland has not only contributed to over seventy years of po...
This symposium is concerned with the possible effects of peace between the two parts of Ireland on t...
The steady drip of dissident Republican attacks forms the backdrop to this special issue of Politica...
Since the outbreak of the Troubles in Northern Ireland, the conflict has been mainly analytically un...
This paper examines economic progress in the island of Ireland in the context of its modern history,...
The New Ireland Forum which opened in Dublin on May 30th 1983 was an important stage in the intellec...
The signing of the Good Friday Agreement was meant to signal an era of economic prosperity for those...
THE CONVENTIONAL WISDOM, employed in a host of civil conflicts, has been that the elimination of con...
This paper considers the lacklustre performance of the Northern Ireland economy in recent decades, i...
It is now more than a decade since British troops were sent to Northern Ireland, and the conflict in...
The 1998 Belfast Agreement brought to an end over three decades of armed conflict in Northern Irelan...
At its heart, the Northern Ireland problem concerns the constitutional and political fate of territo...
This article seeks to critically examine the political economy of the Northern Irish “peace process....
At the beginning the paper presents a brief historic outline of the conflict. It describes the strif...
For a peace process in Ireland to succeed it will require an active transition away from the underly...
This paper argues that the partition of Ireland has not only contributed to over seventy years of po...
This symposium is concerned with the possible effects of peace between the two parts of Ireland on t...
The steady drip of dissident Republican attacks forms the backdrop to this special issue of Politica...
Since the outbreak of the Troubles in Northern Ireland, the conflict has been mainly analytically un...
This paper examines economic progress in the island of Ireland in the context of its modern history,...
The New Ireland Forum which opened in Dublin on May 30th 1983 was an important stage in the intellec...
The signing of the Good Friday Agreement was meant to signal an era of economic prosperity for those...
THE CONVENTIONAL WISDOM, employed in a host of civil conflicts, has been that the elimination of con...
This paper considers the lacklustre performance of the Northern Ireland economy in recent decades, i...
It is now more than a decade since British troops were sent to Northern Ireland, and the conflict in...
The 1998 Belfast Agreement brought to an end over three decades of armed conflict in Northern Irelan...
At its heart, the Northern Ireland problem concerns the constitutional and political fate of territo...
This article seeks to critically examine the political economy of the Northern Irish “peace process....
At the beginning the paper presents a brief historic outline of the conflict. It describes the strif...
For a peace process in Ireland to succeed it will require an active transition away from the underly...
This paper argues that the partition of Ireland has not only contributed to over seventy years of po...