This article concerns the men of the Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) who were disbanded from the force in 1922 and felt obliged to leave Ireland for Britain. Afforded unique – if not always entirely sufficient – financial and practical arrangements by the British government, this was in many respects a distinctive but particularly well documented cohort of Irish migrants. While the RIC was an exclusively male force, disbandment and migration also impacted on the wives and children of married members. The article will first examine the nature of migration under threat of republican violence for Irish-born, disbanded RIC members. It will then explore forced separation and the experiences of police families, before offering some reflections on...
From January 1919 until a truce came into effect on 11 July 1921, a state of undeclared war existed ...
In the bitter sectarian conflict of the Northern Ireland Troubles, which spanned the years 1966- 199...
This article investigates the “Rotten Prods” (Protestants) through an archival and historiographical...
peer-reviewedThe period from 1913 to 1921 in Ireland saw the rise of militant nationalism, the 1916...
Northern Ireland has endured a history of violence since its inception in 1922. The last forty years...
This article focuses on the experiences of Irish soldiers’ families during the Great War. Soldiers’ ...
This article argues that, at a tactical level, loyalist terrorism in the Irish border region between...
This article argues that state violence in Northern Ireland during the period 1970–1976—when violenc...
This article explores the processes involved in leaving social movements or disengaging from terrori...
The focus of this article is an analysis of the potential for Northern Ireland’s loyalist terror gro...
The disbandment of the Southern Irish Regiments of the British army occurred in July 1922 due to the...
This article presents an empirical analysis of a unique dataset of 1240 former members of the Provis...
The aim of this thesis is to highlight the service of ex-British soldiers in the Irish Army and to ...
This article draws on data from one-to-one interviews with members and former members of the Ulster ...
Irish Republican women in Britain formed a vital network which provided their counterparts in Irelan...
From January 1919 until a truce came into effect on 11 July 1921, a state of undeclared war existed ...
In the bitter sectarian conflict of the Northern Ireland Troubles, which spanned the years 1966- 199...
This article investigates the “Rotten Prods” (Protestants) through an archival and historiographical...
peer-reviewedThe period from 1913 to 1921 in Ireland saw the rise of militant nationalism, the 1916...
Northern Ireland has endured a history of violence since its inception in 1922. The last forty years...
This article focuses on the experiences of Irish soldiers’ families during the Great War. Soldiers’ ...
This article argues that, at a tactical level, loyalist terrorism in the Irish border region between...
This article argues that state violence in Northern Ireland during the period 1970–1976—when violenc...
This article explores the processes involved in leaving social movements or disengaging from terrori...
The focus of this article is an analysis of the potential for Northern Ireland’s loyalist terror gro...
The disbandment of the Southern Irish Regiments of the British army occurred in July 1922 due to the...
This article presents an empirical analysis of a unique dataset of 1240 former members of the Provis...
The aim of this thesis is to highlight the service of ex-British soldiers in the Irish Army and to ...
This article draws on data from one-to-one interviews with members and former members of the Ulster ...
Irish Republican women in Britain formed a vital network which provided their counterparts in Irelan...
From January 1919 until a truce came into effect on 11 July 1921, a state of undeclared war existed ...
In the bitter sectarian conflict of the Northern Ireland Troubles, which spanned the years 1966- 199...
This article investigates the “Rotten Prods” (Protestants) through an archival and historiographical...