The development of “social partnership” institutions has been one of the most striking, and surprising aspects of the transformation of Irish society and politics in the past fifteen years. The papers in this special issue explore the character of social partnership as a distinctive mode of governance – examining partnership in action at national and local levels and in interaction with the EU, in macroeconomic bargaining, in sectoral and environmental policy, and in urban and rural settings. The papers are all extensive revisions of papers first presented at a conference on “Social Partnership: A New Mode of Governance?” at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth in September 2004. The conference was generously funded by the...
Social partnership has long been pronounced ‘dead’ and buried, lamented by few. But thirty years on ...
For nearly 20 years the Irish State has engaged in a process of social concertation that has produce...
This article examines the key factors behind the collapse of the Irish social partnership process in...
The development of “social partnership” institutions has been one of the most striking, and surpris...
peer-reviewedThis paper was obtained through PEER (Publishing and the Ecology of European Research) ...
This paper reassesses the relationship between social partnership and the broader Irish policy proce...
From 1987-2009, Irish social partnership operated as a national framework for industrial relations. ...
Ireland has been one of the fastest growing economies in the European Union or the OECD in the 1990s...
The Irish 'Social Partnership' is the way that corporatist accommodates the trade unions, farmers, c...
This paper draws on my recent book, Asymmetric Engagement - The Community and Voluntary Pillar in Ir...
This paper seeks to assess the experience of the social partnership era in Irish industrial relation...
peer-reviewedInternational (Considine & Giguere 2008) and Australian (Smyth, Reddel & Jones 2005) in...
Ireland's social partnership process, now under attack from a number of quarters, has repeatedly bee...
This paper examines the Irish experience of social partnership at organisation level. It argues that...
The Irish model of social partnership is comparatively unusual in the way that it accommodates the i...
Social partnership has long been pronounced ‘dead’ and buried, lamented by few. But thirty years on ...
For nearly 20 years the Irish State has engaged in a process of social concertation that has produce...
This article examines the key factors behind the collapse of the Irish social partnership process in...
The development of “social partnership” institutions has been one of the most striking, and surpris...
peer-reviewedThis paper was obtained through PEER (Publishing and the Ecology of European Research) ...
This paper reassesses the relationship between social partnership and the broader Irish policy proce...
From 1987-2009, Irish social partnership operated as a national framework for industrial relations. ...
Ireland has been one of the fastest growing economies in the European Union or the OECD in the 1990s...
The Irish 'Social Partnership' is the way that corporatist accommodates the trade unions, farmers, c...
This paper draws on my recent book, Asymmetric Engagement - The Community and Voluntary Pillar in Ir...
This paper seeks to assess the experience of the social partnership era in Irish industrial relation...
peer-reviewedInternational (Considine & Giguere 2008) and Australian (Smyth, Reddel & Jones 2005) in...
Ireland's social partnership process, now under attack from a number of quarters, has repeatedly bee...
This paper examines the Irish experience of social partnership at organisation level. It argues that...
The Irish model of social partnership is comparatively unusual in the way that it accommodates the i...
Social partnership has long been pronounced ‘dead’ and buried, lamented by few. But thirty years on ...
For nearly 20 years the Irish State has engaged in a process of social concertation that has produce...
This article examines the key factors behind the collapse of the Irish social partnership process in...