One of the most important legacies of the “Troubles” in Northern Ireland and the ensuing 20 years post-peace-process era, heralded by the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, is the rise of complex and diverse Republican and Loyalist paramilitary groups engaging in acts of terrorism and a wide range of organized criminal and cross-border activities. Yet, little scholarship has been dedicated for examining the nexus between terrorism and organized crime in Northern Ireland or for accurately understanding the role that paramilitaries play in organized crime and their dynamic interactions with organized criminal groups. Informed by empirical evidence and qualitative interviews with government agencies in Northern Ireland, it is this important gap in sc...
Northern Ireland has endured a history of violence since its inception in 1922. The last forty years...
This article analyses how social movements and collective actors can affect political and social tra...
The political and social fragmentation of Northern Ireland is well known, and the violent tactics em...
The focus of this article is an analysis of the potential for Northern Ireland’s loyalist terror gro...
This paper employs a dataset from The Troubles in Northern Ireland to empirically test the interacti...
Many armed groups create informal institutions to maintain social order during conflict. The remnant...
This paper analyses the changing nature of organised and serious crime following the peace process i...
This paper probes the relationship between crime and terrorism conceptualised against the case study...
Since the advent of the Good Friday peace agreement, violence associated with dissident Irish Republ...
In the bitter sectarian conflict of the Northern Ireland Troubles, which spanned the years 1966- 199...
Much of the cooperation on criminal justice matters between the United Kingdom and the Republic of I...
In this paper, a unique dataset of improvised explosive device attacks during “The Troubles” in Nort...
Though often overlooked in recent years, terrorism related to Northern Ireland is still a possible ...
This work was possible due to the support of the European Commission ‘‘Criminal Justice’’ (2007–2013...
This article argues that, at a tactical level, loyalist terrorism in the Irish border region between...
Northern Ireland has endured a history of violence since its inception in 1922. The last forty years...
This article analyses how social movements and collective actors can affect political and social tra...
The political and social fragmentation of Northern Ireland is well known, and the violent tactics em...
The focus of this article is an analysis of the potential for Northern Ireland’s loyalist terror gro...
This paper employs a dataset from The Troubles in Northern Ireland to empirically test the interacti...
Many armed groups create informal institutions to maintain social order during conflict. The remnant...
This paper analyses the changing nature of organised and serious crime following the peace process i...
This paper probes the relationship between crime and terrorism conceptualised against the case study...
Since the advent of the Good Friday peace agreement, violence associated with dissident Irish Republ...
In the bitter sectarian conflict of the Northern Ireland Troubles, which spanned the years 1966- 199...
Much of the cooperation on criminal justice matters between the United Kingdom and the Republic of I...
In this paper, a unique dataset of improvised explosive device attacks during “The Troubles” in Nort...
Though often overlooked in recent years, terrorism related to Northern Ireland is still a possible ...
This work was possible due to the support of the European Commission ‘‘Criminal Justice’’ (2007–2013...
This article argues that, at a tactical level, loyalist terrorism in the Irish border region between...
Northern Ireland has endured a history of violence since its inception in 1922. The last forty years...
This article analyses how social movements and collective actors can affect political and social tra...
The political and social fragmentation of Northern Ireland is well known, and the violent tactics em...