The aim of this chapter is to reconsider Irish foreign, security and defence policy in the light of the State’s 50 - year long commitment to the UN’s system of collective security. It will contrast that commitment with Ire land’s ambivalence towards collective defence and will argue that the ‘neutrality’ debate in Ireland is premised upon a misunderstanding of collective security that has the potential to pose major policy challenges
We might expect that in such a small open economy as Ireland, the impact of global pressures on soci...
The collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the 'Cold War' has given rise to a situation where t...
The need for a common foreign and defence policy for the European Union is increasingly urgent, yet ...
The aim of this chapter is to reconsider Irish foreign, security and defence policy in the light of ...
Security and defence has been a somewhat neglected area of study within Irish foreign policy. Only n...
Security policy is an essential component of any state's governance. It consists of addressing prese...
Throughout the Cold War, Irish national security was detached from Western priorities and its policy...
Brexit poses fundamental challenges to the Irish state across the public policy spectrum but critica...
On the afternoon of September 11 2001 the Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach), Bertie Ahern ordered the...
On the afternoon of September 11 2001 the Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach), Bertie Ahern ordered the...
The future for Ireland’s conventional defence forces and defence and security policy appears set to ...
This chapter examines Irish conceptions of neutrality from the interwar period until the 1990s, and ...
This chapter examines Irish conceptions of neutrality from the interwar period until the 1990s, and ...
After decades of disillusionment, the people and government of the Republic of Ireland (hereafter, ...
Neutrality is both a specific form of foreign policy and a little understood issue in international ...
We might expect that in such a small open economy as Ireland, the impact of global pressures on soci...
The collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the 'Cold War' has given rise to a situation where t...
The need for a common foreign and defence policy for the European Union is increasingly urgent, yet ...
The aim of this chapter is to reconsider Irish foreign, security and defence policy in the light of ...
Security and defence has been a somewhat neglected area of study within Irish foreign policy. Only n...
Security policy is an essential component of any state's governance. It consists of addressing prese...
Throughout the Cold War, Irish national security was detached from Western priorities and its policy...
Brexit poses fundamental challenges to the Irish state across the public policy spectrum but critica...
On the afternoon of September 11 2001 the Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach), Bertie Ahern ordered the...
On the afternoon of September 11 2001 the Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach), Bertie Ahern ordered the...
The future for Ireland’s conventional defence forces and defence and security policy appears set to ...
This chapter examines Irish conceptions of neutrality from the interwar period until the 1990s, and ...
This chapter examines Irish conceptions of neutrality from the interwar period until the 1990s, and ...
After decades of disillusionment, the people and government of the Republic of Ireland (hereafter, ...
Neutrality is both a specific form of foreign policy and a little understood issue in international ...
We might expect that in such a small open economy as Ireland, the impact of global pressures on soci...
The collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the 'Cold War' has given rise to a situation where t...
The need for a common foreign and defence policy for the European Union is increasingly urgent, yet ...