In this paper we provide an account of the property-led boom and bust which has brought Ireland to the point of bankruptcy. Our account details the pivotal role which neoliberal policy played in guiding the course of the country’s recent history, but also heightens awareness of the how the Irish case might, in turn, instruct and illuminate mappings and explanations of neoliberalism’s concrete histories and geographies. To this end, we begin by scrutinising the terms and conditions under which the Irish state might usefully be regarded as neoliberal. Attention is then given to uncovering the causes of the Irish property bubble, the housing oversupply it created, and the proposed solution to this oversupply. In the conclusion we draw ...
non-peer-reviewedIn this paper we outline the features of an emergent resistance in Ireland. We exa...
This paper argues, however, that the economic role of social housing has been fundamentally transfor...
In this paper we provide an overarching analysis of housing in Ireland from 1993-2014, examining tre...
In this paper we provide an account of the property-led boom and bust which has brought Ireland to ...
Abstract. In this paper we provide an account of the property-led boom and bust which has brought Ir...
In this paper, we explore successive waves of neoliberalization in Ireland. We contend that neolibe...
The current economic crisis – the ‘great recession’ – raises numerous questions about neoliberal id...
In the wake of the global financial crisis, and as Europe’s financial and fiscal woes continue, Ire...
The Celtic Tiger economic boom, which occurred in Ireland from approximately 1987 to 2009 has genera...
This paper argues that the global economic recession provides an instructive point to reconsider rec...
peer-reviewedWhile the human consequences of Ireland’s economic crash have been well documented and ...
The recent economic crisis has demonstrated the extent to which households are exposed to the finan...
The growth of the Irish economy in the years 1995-2007 was dramatic and unparalleled by Western econ...
Lauded for its success and heralded as an economic model for peripheral European countries to follow...
In this working paper, we examine the creation of ‘a haunted landscape’ – the recent boom and the b...
non-peer-reviewedIn this paper we outline the features of an emergent resistance in Ireland. We exa...
This paper argues, however, that the economic role of social housing has been fundamentally transfor...
In this paper we provide an overarching analysis of housing in Ireland from 1993-2014, examining tre...
In this paper we provide an account of the property-led boom and bust which has brought Ireland to ...
Abstract. In this paper we provide an account of the property-led boom and bust which has brought Ir...
In this paper, we explore successive waves of neoliberalization in Ireland. We contend that neolibe...
The current economic crisis – the ‘great recession’ – raises numerous questions about neoliberal id...
In the wake of the global financial crisis, and as Europe’s financial and fiscal woes continue, Ire...
The Celtic Tiger economic boom, which occurred in Ireland from approximately 1987 to 2009 has genera...
This paper argues that the global economic recession provides an instructive point to reconsider rec...
peer-reviewedWhile the human consequences of Ireland’s economic crash have been well documented and ...
The recent economic crisis has demonstrated the extent to which households are exposed to the finan...
The growth of the Irish economy in the years 1995-2007 was dramatic and unparalleled by Western econ...
Lauded for its success and heralded as an economic model for peripheral European countries to follow...
In this working paper, we examine the creation of ‘a haunted landscape’ – the recent boom and the b...
non-peer-reviewedIn this paper we outline the features of an emergent resistance in Ireland. We exa...
This paper argues, however, that the economic role of social housing has been fundamentally transfor...
In this paper we provide an overarching analysis of housing in Ireland from 1993-2014, examining tre...