Recent scholarship on civil disobedience in Northern Ireland primarily focuses on the immediate period before the breakout of violence in 1969, and in some cases, on the mass protests of the late 1970s around the H-Block/Armagh prison protests. This paper attempts to fill the gap between these two periods in its analysis of the rent and rates strike of the early 1970s, which was initiated in response to the re-introduction of internment without trial. In doing so, it positions itself against simplistic approaches towards civil disobedience as either oppositional, or causally linked, to armed struggle. Instead, it probes the complexity of its relationship to armed struggle in relation to the Northern Irish and British state’s security polici...
Northern Irelands Civil Rights movement, the IRA, and the regional violence are what characterize it...
First published online: 29 March 2021Between 1973 and 1977, about 100 Provisional republican prisone...
This volume focuses on a number of research questions, drawn from social movement scholarship: How d...
Recent scholarship on civil disobedience in Northern Ireland primarily focuses on the immediate peri...
This article argues that state violence in Northern Ireland during the period 1970–1976—when violenc...
From March 1972 until internment itself was eventually abandoned in December 1975 successive Secreta...
This volume focuses on a number of research questions, drawn from social movement scholarship: How d...
This thesis focuses on the use of internment in Northern Ireland in the early 1970s. It argues that ...
In 1981, ten men starved themselves to death in Northern Ireland’s Maze prison to prove to the world...
This article examines the discursive construction of legitimacy in the early phase of the Troubles i...
From 1971 to 1975, per the Special Powers Act, internment was introduced to Northern Ireland for the...
This thesis examines the 1981 hunger strike by republican prisoners in Northern Ireland against the ...
Beginning in 1969, the Provisional Irish Republican Army conducted a paramilitary campaign designed ...
The purpose behind the thesis is to explore a little studied (and indeed little known) phenomenon of...
In August 1971, the devolved Stormont administration in Northern Ireland introduced internment witho...
Northern Irelands Civil Rights movement, the IRA, and the regional violence are what characterize it...
First published online: 29 March 2021Between 1973 and 1977, about 100 Provisional republican prisone...
This volume focuses on a number of research questions, drawn from social movement scholarship: How d...
Recent scholarship on civil disobedience in Northern Ireland primarily focuses on the immediate peri...
This article argues that state violence in Northern Ireland during the period 1970–1976—when violenc...
From March 1972 until internment itself was eventually abandoned in December 1975 successive Secreta...
This volume focuses on a number of research questions, drawn from social movement scholarship: How d...
This thesis focuses on the use of internment in Northern Ireland in the early 1970s. It argues that ...
In 1981, ten men starved themselves to death in Northern Ireland’s Maze prison to prove to the world...
This article examines the discursive construction of legitimacy in the early phase of the Troubles i...
From 1971 to 1975, per the Special Powers Act, internment was introduced to Northern Ireland for the...
This thesis examines the 1981 hunger strike by republican prisoners in Northern Ireland against the ...
Beginning in 1969, the Provisional Irish Republican Army conducted a paramilitary campaign designed ...
The purpose behind the thesis is to explore a little studied (and indeed little known) phenomenon of...
In August 1971, the devolved Stormont administration in Northern Ireland introduced internment witho...
Northern Irelands Civil Rights movement, the IRA, and the regional violence are what characterize it...
First published online: 29 March 2021Between 1973 and 1977, about 100 Provisional republican prisone...
This volume focuses on a number of research questions, drawn from social movement scholarship: How d...