Positioned within the context of ongoing debate on reform of the Official Languages Act 2003, this article critically examines the Irish state’s legal position regarding the Irish language. Revealing antipathy, paradox and disconnect, both in a historical and contemporary context, the article argues for a reconceptualised debate about the role of law in the protection and promotion of the Irish language. Notwithstanding a complex post-colonial language history and austerity grounded arguments that language rights and language legislative provisions are resource intensive, the article argues that the legal approach to the Irish language should be underpinned by a substantive and more purposive conception of equality. There is, in Ireland, an...
The Irish judiciary’s approach to bilingualism as the constitutional guarantee of the right to use e...
peer-reviewedThe people of Ireland have a complex relationship with the Irish language. Until the mi...
The future of Irish as a living language is uncertain, and some fear it will vanish completely. In t...
The central objective in this thesis is to explore the gaps between the normative justifications adv...
The Official Languages Act (henceforth OLA) of 2003 gave limited expression to the constitutional s...
This thesis examines the central research questions as to what extent the Irish language plays a sig...
This article examines the use of the Irish language in the criminal courts of the Republic of Irelan...
This article reviews the Irish experience of plurilingual aspiration from three perspectives. It fir...
Copyright © 2014 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Common...
The case of the Irish language could be considered an anomaly – a nation that, in most of its territ...
This paper explores the scope for domestic language rights litigation in the United Kingdom (UK), fo...
Since January 2017, the Northern Irish government has been shut down, with both the Executive and As...
This thesis enquires whether the Irish language can be removed from discourses of conflict in post-A...
When the Irish Free State was founded in 1922, the Irish language was a substantial feature of the ...
As a language, Irish is unique to Ireland and is, therefore, of crucial importance to the identity o...
The Irish judiciary’s approach to bilingualism as the constitutional guarantee of the right to use e...
peer-reviewedThe people of Ireland have a complex relationship with the Irish language. Until the mi...
The future of Irish as a living language is uncertain, and some fear it will vanish completely. In t...
The central objective in this thesis is to explore the gaps between the normative justifications adv...
The Official Languages Act (henceforth OLA) of 2003 gave limited expression to the constitutional s...
This thesis examines the central research questions as to what extent the Irish language plays a sig...
This article examines the use of the Irish language in the criminal courts of the Republic of Irelan...
This article reviews the Irish experience of plurilingual aspiration from three perspectives. It fir...
Copyright © 2014 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Common...
The case of the Irish language could be considered an anomaly – a nation that, in most of its territ...
This paper explores the scope for domestic language rights litigation in the United Kingdom (UK), fo...
Since January 2017, the Northern Irish government has been shut down, with both the Executive and As...
This thesis enquires whether the Irish language can be removed from discourses of conflict in post-A...
When the Irish Free State was founded in 1922, the Irish language was a substantial feature of the ...
As a language, Irish is unique to Ireland and is, therefore, of crucial importance to the identity o...
The Irish judiciary’s approach to bilingualism as the constitutional guarantee of the right to use e...
peer-reviewedThe people of Ireland have a complex relationship with the Irish language. Until the mi...
The future of Irish as a living language is uncertain, and some fear it will vanish completely. In t...