This thesis will explore how the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) was affected by the escalating series of protests initiated by Irish republican prisoners in the Maze Prison (HBlocks) during the period 1976 - 1981. The thesis will detail the pressures that were placed upon the various units of the GAA, from internal and external sources, to publicly support the demands of the protesting prisoners. The thesis will question how the GAA, an organisation perceived by many as nationalist/republican in outlook, responded to these demands, while at the same time responding to those from within and outside the association who were against any form of GAA support for the prisoners. The support the GAA gave to the prisoners will be explored in the ...
Formed in 1873 and 1887 respectively, the histories of Scottish football titans Glasgow Rangers and ...
This dissertation uses the idea of a moral polity as an organizing concept to help understand how th...
This paper examines the influence of organisations representing “ordinary” prisoners in the Republic...
This thesis will explore how the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) was affected by the escalating s...
This thesis examines the 1981 hunger strike by republican prisoners in Northern Ireland against the ...
This thesis examines the emergence of both the Irish Republican Socialist Party and Irish National L...
The mass incarceration of Republicans in the North of Ireland was a policy decision that would have ...
The Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) and the Irish Football Association (IFA) were founded in the 1...
First published online: 29 March 2021Between 1973 and 1977, about 100 Provisional republican prisone...
The article explores the early years of the campaign for ‘ordinary’, not politically-aligned, prison...
The violence associated with the modern Northern Irish imbroglio prompted a significant escalation i...
The Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) is undoubtedly the most impor-tant sporting body in Ireland. B...
In 1981 a hunger strike broke out wich was held in the correctional facility Maze in Belfast. The hu...
After being founded as an organisation for the protection of political prisoners in 1961, Amnesty In...
This thesis' topic is The Irish party system and its changes in the last 25 years with a focus on th...
Formed in 1873 and 1887 respectively, the histories of Scottish football titans Glasgow Rangers and ...
This dissertation uses the idea of a moral polity as an organizing concept to help understand how th...
This paper examines the influence of organisations representing “ordinary” prisoners in the Republic...
This thesis will explore how the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) was affected by the escalating s...
This thesis examines the 1981 hunger strike by republican prisoners in Northern Ireland against the ...
This thesis examines the emergence of both the Irish Republican Socialist Party and Irish National L...
The mass incarceration of Republicans in the North of Ireland was a policy decision that would have ...
The Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) and the Irish Football Association (IFA) were founded in the 1...
First published online: 29 March 2021Between 1973 and 1977, about 100 Provisional republican prisone...
The article explores the early years of the campaign for ‘ordinary’, not politically-aligned, prison...
The violence associated with the modern Northern Irish imbroglio prompted a significant escalation i...
The Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) is undoubtedly the most impor-tant sporting body in Ireland. B...
In 1981 a hunger strike broke out wich was held in the correctional facility Maze in Belfast. The hu...
After being founded as an organisation for the protection of political prisoners in 1961, Amnesty In...
This thesis' topic is The Irish party system and its changes in the last 25 years with a focus on th...
Formed in 1873 and 1887 respectively, the histories of Scottish football titans Glasgow Rangers and ...
This dissertation uses the idea of a moral polity as an organizing concept to help understand how th...
This paper examines the influence of organisations representing “ordinary” prisoners in the Republic...