Barbara Richter finds Wasters to be a compelling and insightful book on waste and scandal in the Irish economy, and notes that the authors have not lost their sense of humour despite the serious nature of the topic. Wasters. Shane Ross and Nick Webb. Penguin. June 2011
This is a review of a collection of essays entitled Questioning Ireland: debates in political phil...
Steve Coulter reviews R.A.W. Rhodes’ fascinating and insightful work on the inner workings of the Wh...
This is a review of a collection of essays entitled Questioning Ireland: debates in political phil...
Steve Coulter finds optimism in the latest book by David J Lynch which looks carefully at Ireland’s ...
Review of "The Blue Wall of Silence: The Morris Tribunal and Police Accountability in Ireland" by Vi...
Review of "The Blue Wall of Silence: The Morris Tribunal and Police Accountability in Ireland" by Vi...
In Called To Account: How Corporate Bad Behaviour and Government Waste Combine To Cost Us Millions, ...
In 1860, the Irish nationalist writer John Mitchell avowed that ‘The Almighty, indeed, sent the pota...
Michael Kerr’s reconstruction of Northern Ireland’s ‘lost peace process’ reads at times like a polit...
Two-thirds of UK government spending now goes on the welfare state and where the money is spent – he...
Andrew Sanders provides readers with an excellent backdrop to the underlining tensions that continue...
Political Bubbles is very enjoyable, insightful, and challenging, writes Declan Jordan. It addresses...
After scandals around expenses, donations and lobbying, money has become a dirty word in British pol...
Why was the Irish 2011 election considered ’truly seismic’ but at the same time regarded as matterin...
This book is an interesting study of splits within the republican movement since the beginning of Th...
This is a review of a collection of essays entitled Questioning Ireland: debates in political phil...
Steve Coulter reviews R.A.W. Rhodes’ fascinating and insightful work on the inner workings of the Wh...
This is a review of a collection of essays entitled Questioning Ireland: debates in political phil...
Steve Coulter finds optimism in the latest book by David J Lynch which looks carefully at Ireland’s ...
Review of "The Blue Wall of Silence: The Morris Tribunal and Police Accountability in Ireland" by Vi...
Review of "The Blue Wall of Silence: The Morris Tribunal and Police Accountability in Ireland" by Vi...
In Called To Account: How Corporate Bad Behaviour and Government Waste Combine To Cost Us Millions, ...
In 1860, the Irish nationalist writer John Mitchell avowed that ‘The Almighty, indeed, sent the pota...
Michael Kerr’s reconstruction of Northern Ireland’s ‘lost peace process’ reads at times like a polit...
Two-thirds of UK government spending now goes on the welfare state and where the money is spent – he...
Andrew Sanders provides readers with an excellent backdrop to the underlining tensions that continue...
Political Bubbles is very enjoyable, insightful, and challenging, writes Declan Jordan. It addresses...
After scandals around expenses, donations and lobbying, money has become a dirty word in British pol...
Why was the Irish 2011 election considered ’truly seismic’ but at the same time regarded as matterin...
This book is an interesting study of splits within the republican movement since the beginning of Th...
This is a review of a collection of essays entitled Questioning Ireland: debates in political phil...
Steve Coulter reviews R.A.W. Rhodes’ fascinating and insightful work on the inner workings of the Wh...
This is a review of a collection of essays entitled Questioning Ireland: debates in political phil...