This paper is a methodological reflection on the experiences of a white Irish woman researching ethnicity in England. Ethnic identity is described as a performance between two social actors that requires the collusion of both parties in order to be socially accepted. The history and disputes around the white Irish ethnic group category in England are discussed. Through the use of fieldnotes and interview extracts, I discuss how I became aware that my ethnic identity was not always recognised by participants, and in some cases the distinction between white Irish and white British was denied. At the micro level this affects my rapport with individual participants, while at the macro level it resonates with historical relationships between Ire...
There is a growing body of work in racial and ethnic studies on the processes of ethnic identity con...
The focus of this article is the second-generation Irish in England. It is based on d...
The Irish in Britain have only recently been granted ethnic status. This blind spot which existed to...
The Irish are the largest and longest-established non-British minority ethnic group in Britain, but ...
The focus of this article is the second-generation Irish in England. It is based on data collected a...
International audienceThe Irish in England in the post-World War II period were not recognised in of...
This thesis attends to the question of identity, specifically ethnic identity, as it related to arou...
The Irish are largely invisible as an ethnic group in Britain but continue to be racialized as infer...
Whiteness is often detached from the notion of diaspora in the recent flurry of interest in the phen...
‘Plastic and proud’?: discourses of authenticity among the second-generation Irish in EnglandThis pa...
Systems of ethnic monitoring are of fundamental importance in the context of policy commitments to i...
This thesis examines the forms of identity which are adopted by individuals who were born in Birmin...
Censuses do not simply collect data; they also simultaneously influence the identities they seek to ...
Ethnonational movements have proliferated throughout the world since the American and French Revolut...
Mixed-race people can be caught in a web of stereotypes – being pathologised as tragically ‘mixed u...
There is a growing body of work in racial and ethnic studies on the processes of ethnic identity con...
The focus of this article is the second-generation Irish in England. It is based on d...
The Irish in Britain have only recently been granted ethnic status. This blind spot which existed to...
The Irish are the largest and longest-established non-British minority ethnic group in Britain, but ...
The focus of this article is the second-generation Irish in England. It is based on data collected a...
International audienceThe Irish in England in the post-World War II period were not recognised in of...
This thesis attends to the question of identity, specifically ethnic identity, as it related to arou...
The Irish are largely invisible as an ethnic group in Britain but continue to be racialized as infer...
Whiteness is often detached from the notion of diaspora in the recent flurry of interest in the phen...
‘Plastic and proud’?: discourses of authenticity among the second-generation Irish in EnglandThis pa...
Systems of ethnic monitoring are of fundamental importance in the context of policy commitments to i...
This thesis examines the forms of identity which are adopted by individuals who were born in Birmin...
Censuses do not simply collect data; they also simultaneously influence the identities they seek to ...
Ethnonational movements have proliferated throughout the world since the American and French Revolut...
Mixed-race people can be caught in a web of stereotypes – being pathologised as tragically ‘mixed u...
There is a growing body of work in racial and ethnic studies on the processes of ethnic identity con...
The focus of this article is the second-generation Irish in England. It is based on d...
The Irish in Britain have only recently been granted ethnic status. This blind spot which existed to...