Since the announcement of the Irish recession in 2008, there has been much media and popular speculation regarding the apparent failure of the Irish people to collectively resist austerity. The socialisation of private banking debt and successive fiscal ‘adjustments’, which have seen huge reductions in public spending, disproportionately impacting on the Irish community and voluntary sector (Harvey, 2012), have not generated sustained opposition from civil society. Apocryphal stories of Greek protesters chanting ‘we are not like Ireland’ or the current Irish Minister for Finance Michael Noonan’s threats to print t-shirts with the slogan ‘We’re not Greece’, belie a more complex reality. Evidently, as Laurence Cox (2012) has observed in th...
This paper offers a reading of anti-austerity protests in the Irish Republic, placing under scrutiny...
In this chapter I argue that austerity is not primarily designed to solve an economic crisis, but ra...
In the summer of 2009, Ireland was the first European country to officially enter recession followin...
Since the announcement of the Irish recession in 2008, there has been much media and popular specula...
Book chapter in Emma Heffernan, Niamh Moore-Cherry and John McHale (eds). 'Debating Austerity: Crisi...
In the period 2008-10, many observers were surprised at how quickly and completely neoliberal orthod...
From being the "Celtic Tiger" poster child of neo-liberalism, Ireland has moved first into recessio...
non-peer-reviewedIn this paper we outline the features of an emergent resistance in Ireland. We exa...
The European financial crisis has inspired a wave of social activism, challenging established party ...
Austerity, resistance and changing values in Ireland: social movement outcomes and political polariz...
Examining the politics of Irish responses to crisis-related social security cuts gives insight into ...
The Irish crash that began in 2008 has been described as one of the most dramatic economic reversals...
?Simon Wren-Lewis?s chapter in this volume outlines a general theory of austerity. Underpinning it i...
In October 2008, the Irish pensioners engaged in nation-wide public campaign of dissent in response ...
In this research article we explore the manner in which a particular discursive device, the “siniste...
This paper offers a reading of anti-austerity protests in the Irish Republic, placing under scrutiny...
In this chapter I argue that austerity is not primarily designed to solve an economic crisis, but ra...
In the summer of 2009, Ireland was the first European country to officially enter recession followin...
Since the announcement of the Irish recession in 2008, there has been much media and popular specula...
Book chapter in Emma Heffernan, Niamh Moore-Cherry and John McHale (eds). 'Debating Austerity: Crisi...
In the period 2008-10, many observers were surprised at how quickly and completely neoliberal orthod...
From being the "Celtic Tiger" poster child of neo-liberalism, Ireland has moved first into recessio...
non-peer-reviewedIn this paper we outline the features of an emergent resistance in Ireland. We exa...
The European financial crisis has inspired a wave of social activism, challenging established party ...
Austerity, resistance and changing values in Ireland: social movement outcomes and political polariz...
Examining the politics of Irish responses to crisis-related social security cuts gives insight into ...
The Irish crash that began in 2008 has been described as one of the most dramatic economic reversals...
?Simon Wren-Lewis?s chapter in this volume outlines a general theory of austerity. Underpinning it i...
In October 2008, the Irish pensioners engaged in nation-wide public campaign of dissent in response ...
In this research article we explore the manner in which a particular discursive device, the “siniste...
This paper offers a reading of anti-austerity protests in the Irish Republic, placing under scrutiny...
In this chapter I argue that austerity is not primarily designed to solve an economic crisis, but ra...
In the summer of 2009, Ireland was the first European country to officially enter recession followin...