This article addresses avenues for reconciliation and the persistence of the Troubles in Northern Ireland in the interconnected contexts of politics, remembrance culture and public discourse during the peace process, with particular attention focused on the operations of transitional justice and restorative memory (a category I derive from restorative justice and restorative truth). I argue that the peace process realities in Northern Ireland actively invite a mode of social and political evasion of the past by consigning recent history to cultural discourses, to be explored and chronicled mostly by works of fi ction, rather than weighed on the scales of justice in the fi rst place. Post-Troubles fi ction off ers carefully selected p...
This article offers a reflection on the potency of combining oral history and agonistic memory. Via ...
In this introduction, we set out to provide the appropriate historical context for the nine essays ...
Sixteen years after the Good Friday Agreement, Northern Ireland remains a deeply segregated society....
This article examines the politics of memory informing Northern Irish poetry published after the Goo...
This article explores the reasons for persistent memory wars surrounding the Northern Ireland confli...
A A common question shared by many, both individuals and entire post conflict societies, is how to a...
The 'desire for justice' is an expression commonly used to describe the demand for redress made by v...
The 1998 Belfast or Good Friday Agreement (GFA), a political agreement in Northern Ireland whic...
This article considers Northern Ireland’s history of conflict through a lens that emphasizes concili...
This article explores the reasons for the slow progress being made in the Northern Ireland peace pro...
Northern Ireland, as we all know, is often presented as a model for conflict resolution around the w...
The decades following the 1998 Good Friday/Belfast Agreement saw an expansion of support for cultura...
This paper is concerned with the politics of memory and their consequences – how memory in its tangi...
This article explores the use of storytelling in healing past hurts and its potential in bringing ab...
Peace in Northern Ireland today remains fragile despite the exhaustive peacebuilding efforts that ha...
This article offers a reflection on the potency of combining oral history and agonistic memory. Via ...
In this introduction, we set out to provide the appropriate historical context for the nine essays ...
Sixteen years after the Good Friday Agreement, Northern Ireland remains a deeply segregated society....
This article examines the politics of memory informing Northern Irish poetry published after the Goo...
This article explores the reasons for persistent memory wars surrounding the Northern Ireland confli...
A A common question shared by many, both individuals and entire post conflict societies, is how to a...
The 'desire for justice' is an expression commonly used to describe the demand for redress made by v...
The 1998 Belfast or Good Friday Agreement (GFA), a political agreement in Northern Ireland whic...
This article considers Northern Ireland’s history of conflict through a lens that emphasizes concili...
This article explores the reasons for the slow progress being made in the Northern Ireland peace pro...
Northern Ireland, as we all know, is often presented as a model for conflict resolution around the w...
The decades following the 1998 Good Friday/Belfast Agreement saw an expansion of support for cultura...
This paper is concerned with the politics of memory and their consequences – how memory in its tangi...
This article explores the use of storytelling in healing past hurts and its potential in bringing ab...
Peace in Northern Ireland today remains fragile despite the exhaustive peacebuilding efforts that ha...
This article offers a reflection on the potency of combining oral history and agonistic memory. Via ...
In this introduction, we set out to provide the appropriate historical context for the nine essays ...
Sixteen years after the Good Friday Agreement, Northern Ireland remains a deeply segregated society....