Abstract This article argues that the failure of Northern Ireland’s first power-sharing executive, and subsequent attempts to restore power-sharing during the 1970s, was the result of conflicting attitudes towards devolution among Northern Ireland’s politicians. Traditional ideological divisions between nationalists and unionists were not the primary barrier to creating and sustaining cross-community institutions, as stressed in accounts of this period premised on consociational theory. Drawing extensively from archival sour-ces, it argues that the split between the pragmatists from both communities, who were prepared to compromise their core principles and accept power-sharing devolution within a UK framework, and the dogmatists (both nati...
In the early 1990s the British and Irish governments moved away from the policy of attempting to mar...
Twenty years beyond its signing, the Good Friday Agreement remains the cornerstone of ‘peace’ in Nor...
International audienceThis paper argues that New Labour's devolution proposals can be seen as part o...
This article argues that the failure of Northern Ireland’s first power-sharing executive, and subseq...
The Belfast Agreement attempted to find a set of political institutions that could resolve an appare...
n this article I examine one particular way in which the Anglo-Irish Agreement redefined unionist po...
This article argues that the root of recent crises and political stalemate in Northern Ireland lies ...
This article sets out to tell the story of the Conservative associations that appeared in parts of N...
The author analysis the two different stances of the recent landmark settlement on Northern Irelan...
This article considers the failed attempt to reconcile unionism and nationalism in Northern Ireland ...
This article argues that membership in the European Community, and especially representation in the ...
This article argues that the dominance of the theory of modernisation - that growing economic integr...
The author discusses the obstacles in transitioning to the new power-sharing Northern Ireland Assemb...
This article uses Donald Horowitz’s theory of ethnic party competition in order to understand the de...
In a previous issue of Irish Studies Review I examined the unanticipated emergence in the late 1980s...
In the early 1990s the British and Irish governments moved away from the policy of attempting to mar...
Twenty years beyond its signing, the Good Friday Agreement remains the cornerstone of ‘peace’ in Nor...
International audienceThis paper argues that New Labour's devolution proposals can be seen as part o...
This article argues that the failure of Northern Ireland’s first power-sharing executive, and subseq...
The Belfast Agreement attempted to find a set of political institutions that could resolve an appare...
n this article I examine one particular way in which the Anglo-Irish Agreement redefined unionist po...
This article argues that the root of recent crises and political stalemate in Northern Ireland lies ...
This article sets out to tell the story of the Conservative associations that appeared in parts of N...
The author analysis the two different stances of the recent landmark settlement on Northern Irelan...
This article considers the failed attempt to reconcile unionism and nationalism in Northern Ireland ...
This article argues that membership in the European Community, and especially representation in the ...
This article argues that the dominance of the theory of modernisation - that growing economic integr...
The author discusses the obstacles in transitioning to the new power-sharing Northern Ireland Assemb...
This article uses Donald Horowitz’s theory of ethnic party competition in order to understand the de...
In a previous issue of Irish Studies Review I examined the unanticipated emergence in the late 1980s...
In the early 1990s the British and Irish governments moved away from the policy of attempting to mar...
Twenty years beyond its signing, the Good Friday Agreement remains the cornerstone of ‘peace’ in Nor...
International audienceThis paper argues that New Labour's devolution proposals can be seen as part o...