This article examines accounts of discrimination in employment against Irish Catholics in Glasgow from both majority and minority ethnic and religious perspectives. It reveals evidence of continuing experience of sectarian discrimination in work. Of particular note is the existence of discriminatory practice affecting Catholic (Irish-descended) attempts to move up the social scale. This evidence disputes the thoroughness of analyses which ignore discrimination experience as relevant to the current social-class position of Glasgow's Irish Catholic community. The analysis presented here also questions the practice of excluding 'white' ethnic groups from most studies of ethnicity in Britain and considers whether sectarianism or racism might m...
International audienceThis article explores the contested issue of whether sectarianism divides Cath...
of opportunity cannot be extrapolated from the sectarion history of the ’The basic fear of the Prote...
Paper presented to the IBIS conference Old structures, new beliefs: religion, community and politics...
This paper considers the ways in which accounts from Glasgow Catholics diverge from those of Protest...
peer-reviewedThis is an investigation of the experience of religious stigma and discrimination among...
This article examines relations between Catholic and Protestant Irish immigrants in two Clydeside to...
In popular understanding, the word “sectarianism” in Scotland describes the religious conflict and p...
The aim of this research was to explore the work experiences of anti-sectarian workers in Scotland f...
Ethnic and religious minorities often suffer disadvantages both in socio-economic status and in heal...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>Intolerance and racism...
In common with some other ethnic and religious minorities whose forebears migrated from their countr...
In Great Britain, a new ethnicity question appeared in the Censuses of 2001 in Scotland and England/...
Overall our main concerns are an apparently confused view of how to define sectarianism, leading to ...
This paper focuses on discrimination on the ground of religion or belief in Ireland. It is based on ...
The overall aim of this research is to provide qualitative data which may help explain the health di...
International audienceThis article explores the contested issue of whether sectarianism divides Cath...
of opportunity cannot be extrapolated from the sectarion history of the ’The basic fear of the Prote...
Paper presented to the IBIS conference Old structures, new beliefs: religion, community and politics...
This paper considers the ways in which accounts from Glasgow Catholics diverge from those of Protest...
peer-reviewedThis is an investigation of the experience of religious stigma and discrimination among...
This article examines relations between Catholic and Protestant Irish immigrants in two Clydeside to...
In popular understanding, the word “sectarianism” in Scotland describes the religious conflict and p...
The aim of this research was to explore the work experiences of anti-sectarian workers in Scotland f...
Ethnic and religious minorities often suffer disadvantages both in socio-economic status and in heal...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>Intolerance and racism...
In common with some other ethnic and religious minorities whose forebears migrated from their countr...
In Great Britain, a new ethnicity question appeared in the Censuses of 2001 in Scotland and England/...
Overall our main concerns are an apparently confused view of how to define sectarianism, leading to ...
This paper focuses on discrimination on the ground of religion or belief in Ireland. It is based on ...
The overall aim of this research is to provide qualitative data which may help explain the health di...
International audienceThis article explores the contested issue of whether sectarianism divides Cath...
of opportunity cannot be extrapolated from the sectarion history of the ’The basic fear of the Prote...
Paper presented to the IBIS conference Old structures, new beliefs: religion, community and politics...