Prepared for presentation at the annual meeting of the Specialist Group on British and Comparative Territorial Politics of the Political Studies Association of the United Kingdom, University of Oxford, 7-8 January 2010This paper analyses the relationship between the two main parties in the Irish party system when dealing with the Northern Ireland question. Taking the Sunningdale Communiqué as a starting point, the paper argues that while aspirations for bipartisanship in the Dáil on this issue existed within the leadership of both parties at various times during the conflict, that the difference in approach and fundamental difference in ideology of party leaders meant that bipartisanship was not achieved until consensus on key issues was ...
Summary of a lecture presented by Seamus Mallon, and the revised text of a lecture presented by Éamo...
Presentation at the annual meeting of the Specialist Group on British and Comparative Territorial P...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
Paper presented at the conference “Assessing the Sunningdale Agreement”, Institute for British-Irish...
This new study reveals how British and Irish governments not only had different reasons for co-opera...
In the early 1990s the British and Irish governments moved away from the policy of attempting to mar...
Paper presented to the IBIS conference Renovation or Revolution? New territorial politics in Ireland...
First published: July 1991This paper attempts an application of Nordlinger's theory of conflict regu...
The Haagerup Report commissioned by the European Parliament in 1984 was the first major initiative t...
Despite some historical divergence, political parties in the Republic of Ireland shared some key obj...
Paper presented at the conference “From Conflict to Consensus: The Legacy of the Good Friday Agreem...
This bachelor thesis deals with a comparative analysis of two parts of the Sinn Féin party, which as...
paper examines the roles played by the Irish government and more particularly Northern Ireland’s Soc...
They include the treatment of the issues of self-determination, consent, and the status of Northern ...
Nationalist and ethnic conflicts are a continuing source of tension in the post–Cold War period. Th...
Summary of a lecture presented by Seamus Mallon, and the revised text of a lecture presented by Éamo...
Presentation at the annual meeting of the Specialist Group on British and Comparative Territorial P...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
Paper presented at the conference “Assessing the Sunningdale Agreement”, Institute for British-Irish...
This new study reveals how British and Irish governments not only had different reasons for co-opera...
In the early 1990s the British and Irish governments moved away from the policy of attempting to mar...
Paper presented to the IBIS conference Renovation or Revolution? New territorial politics in Ireland...
First published: July 1991This paper attempts an application of Nordlinger's theory of conflict regu...
The Haagerup Report commissioned by the European Parliament in 1984 was the first major initiative t...
Despite some historical divergence, political parties in the Republic of Ireland shared some key obj...
Paper presented at the conference “From Conflict to Consensus: The Legacy of the Good Friday Agreem...
This bachelor thesis deals with a comparative analysis of two parts of the Sinn Féin party, which as...
paper examines the roles played by the Irish government and more particularly Northern Ireland’s Soc...
They include the treatment of the issues of self-determination, consent, and the status of Northern ...
Nationalist and ethnic conflicts are a continuing source of tension in the post–Cold War period. Th...
Summary of a lecture presented by Seamus Mallon, and the revised text of a lecture presented by Éamo...
Presentation at the annual meeting of the Specialist Group on British and Comparative Territorial P...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...