Ireland was a diverse society made up of various nationalities and ethnic minorities before the twentieth century. Relationships and tensions have developed between these various ‘foreign’ groups and Ireland’s host nation over the centuries. However, these relationships were put under pressure with the start of the First World War. Emergency legislation introduced by the British Government at the start of the Great War and the public hysteria, often created by Britain’s right-wing press, politicians and the official propaganda network all helped to fuel the flames of anti-alien fervour in Britain. During the first two months of war the daily lives of Ireland’s ‘enemy aliens’ were hugely affected, with anti-German rioting in Dublin and the a...
This research paper identified and examined the political and policy responses of the British govern...
AbstractBetween Subject and Alien: Decolonization, Citizenship, and the Irish Diaspora in Interwar B...
During the First World War, Britain was the epicentre of global mass internment and deportation oper...
The Irish in Britain during the Second World War occupied an anomalous and much misunderstood posit...
This study examines three distinct aspects of Irish life during the First World War. These are the...
The Irish in Britain are paradoxically Britain's longest established major ethnic group and also its...
When about 3,000 Belgian refugees came to Ireland in autumn 1914, some were catered for in the regio...
International audienceAt the time when Irish veterans of the Great War were being demobilized, Irela...
Ireland played no part in the events which led to the outbreak of the First World War, or the subseq...
World War I was the first conflict during which a complex system of measures against enemy civilian...
Few domestic issues in Great Britain during the First World War proved more politically sensitive or...
The Irish Revolutionary Period (1911-1927) includes the period of the First World War, one of, if no...
In mid-1940, Austrians, Germans, and Italians in Britain were labelled ‘enemies’ by the government a...
[Extract] Ireland was something of a paradox during the First World War. She was the “one bright spo...
This research paper identified and examined the political and policy responses of the British govern...
AbstractBetween Subject and Alien: Decolonization, Citizenship, and the Irish Diaspora in Interwar B...
During the First World War, Britain was the epicentre of global mass internment and deportation oper...
The Irish in Britain during the Second World War occupied an anomalous and much misunderstood posit...
This study examines three distinct aspects of Irish life during the First World War. These are the...
The Irish in Britain are paradoxically Britain's longest established major ethnic group and also its...
When about 3,000 Belgian refugees came to Ireland in autumn 1914, some were catered for in the regio...
International audienceAt the time when Irish veterans of the Great War were being demobilized, Irela...
Ireland played no part in the events which led to the outbreak of the First World War, or the subseq...
World War I was the first conflict during which a complex system of measures against enemy civilian...
Few domestic issues in Great Britain during the First World War proved more politically sensitive or...
The Irish Revolutionary Period (1911-1927) includes the period of the First World War, one of, if no...
In mid-1940, Austrians, Germans, and Italians in Britain were labelled ‘enemies’ by the government a...
[Extract] Ireland was something of a paradox during the First World War. She was the “one bright spo...
This research paper identified and examined the political and policy responses of the British govern...
AbstractBetween Subject and Alien: Decolonization, Citizenship, and the Irish Diaspora in Interwar B...
During the First World War, Britain was the epicentre of global mass internment and deportation oper...