The task set for the Institute for British Irish Studies, University College Dublin (IBIS) was to compare and contrast two policy documents: ‘A Shared Future: Improving Relations in Northern Ireland’ (March 2005) and the ‘Programme for Cohesion, Sharing and Integration’ (July 2010) and to comment on significant differences between the documents in light of current international scholarship and research on issues of identity, cultural difference and social division in conflict and post-conflict situations
Paper presented at the workshop on “The Irish border in perspective” as part of the Mapping frontier...
This paper identifies opportunities for cross-border cooperation on the historic environment on the ...
The peace process in Northern Ireland demonstrates that new sovereignty formulas need to be explored...
The task set for the Institute for British Irish Studies, University College Dublin (IBIS) was to co...
Revised text of two lectures presented as part of the seminar series “Institution building and the p...
There are two major public policy objectives in Northern Ireland. One is the equality agenda designe...
Despite political progress in Northern Ireland, the polity may arguably only fully stabilise when it...
Paper presented to the IBIS conference Renovation or Revolution? New territorial politics in Ireland...
This bachelor thesis deals with a comparative analysis of two parts of the Sinn Féin party, which as...
This new study reveals how British and Irish governments not only had different reasons for co-opera...
The Belfast Agreement attempted to find a set of political institutions that could resolve an appare...
Prepared for presentation at the annual meeting of the Specialist Group on British and Comparative ...
After the so-called “Troubles”, since 1998, Northern Ireland is experiencing a complicated but last...
There is a common understanding that peace was reached in Northern Ireland with the Good Friday Agre...
Paper presented at the conference “From Conflict to Consensus: The Legacy of the Good Friday Agreem...
Paper presented at the workshop on “The Irish border in perspective” as part of the Mapping frontier...
This paper identifies opportunities for cross-border cooperation on the historic environment on the ...
The peace process in Northern Ireland demonstrates that new sovereignty formulas need to be explored...
The task set for the Institute for British Irish Studies, University College Dublin (IBIS) was to co...
Revised text of two lectures presented as part of the seminar series “Institution building and the p...
There are two major public policy objectives in Northern Ireland. One is the equality agenda designe...
Despite political progress in Northern Ireland, the polity may arguably only fully stabilise when it...
Paper presented to the IBIS conference Renovation or Revolution? New territorial politics in Ireland...
This bachelor thesis deals with a comparative analysis of two parts of the Sinn Féin party, which as...
This new study reveals how British and Irish governments not only had different reasons for co-opera...
The Belfast Agreement attempted to find a set of political institutions that could resolve an appare...
Prepared for presentation at the annual meeting of the Specialist Group on British and Comparative ...
After the so-called “Troubles”, since 1998, Northern Ireland is experiencing a complicated but last...
There is a common understanding that peace was reached in Northern Ireland with the Good Friday Agre...
Paper presented at the conference “From Conflict to Consensus: The Legacy of the Good Friday Agreem...
Paper presented at the workshop on “The Irish border in perspective” as part of the Mapping frontier...
This paper identifies opportunities for cross-border cooperation on the historic environment on the ...
The peace process in Northern Ireland demonstrates that new sovereignty formulas need to be explored...