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American Diplomacy and Economic Aid in the Northern Ireland Peace Process: A Neoliberal Analysis

open access: yesOpen Library of Humanities, 2018
There are no purely military solutions to the myriad of ethnic and sectarian conflicts in the world today. If this is the case, then what are the most appropriate means of intervention?
Timothy J. White
doaj   +2 more sources

Mourning the Troubles: Anna Burns’s Milkman as a Gendered Response to the Belfast Agreement

open access: yesIlha do Desterro, 2021
The past two decades have produced extensive criticism of the Good Friday/Belfast Agreement’s (1999) progressivist logic in its proposal of a “fresh start” as the best way to honour the victims of the armed conflict that took place during the Troubles ...
Marcela Santos Brigida, Davi Pinho
doaj   +1 more source

Symbolic, Social and Territorial Boundaries: Paradoxes of Groupness and Potentials for Change in Northern Ireland

open access: yesReview of Irish Studies in Europe, 2023
This article focusses on social, symbolic and territorial boundaries in Northern Ireland, and the group relationships that they define. It asks how the social and symbolic boundaries have been renewed despite so much political and popular effort to move ...
Jennifer Todd
doaj   +1 more source

Northern Ireland: Is Brexit a Threat to the Peace Process and the Soft Irish Border?

open access: yesRevue Française de Civilisation Britannique, 2017
In Northern Ireland, the EU Referendum debate focused on two specific issues related to the political stability of the province and the Irish border, particularly as far as the Remainers were concerned.
Carine Berberi
doaj   +1 more source

UK Internal Market Bill [PDF]

open access: yesНаучно-аналитический вестник Института Европы РАН, 2020
The Internal Market Bill of the UK government is meant to secure flawless motion of goods and services between all parts of Britain in the wake of Brexit, to prevent competition and trade barriers between the regions, including Northern Ireland. The bill
Elena Ananieva
doaj   +1 more source

Northern Ireland Peace Talks (1993–1998): Factors of Success

open access: yesМеждународная аналитика, 2018
The article examines the final phase of Northern Ireland peace negotiations (1993–1998), which resulted in the Good Friday Agreement, a document that established the current constitutional status of the country.
A. A. Nosach
doaj   +1 more source

As British as Finchley? The Evolution of the Positions of the British Government and Irish Republicanism Regarding Sovereignty over Northern Ireland [PDF]

open access: yesEstudios Irlandeses, 2019
This article examines the evolution of the British Government’s position regarding the question of the sovereignty over Northern Ireland from the post-Partition era until the signing of the Good Friday Agreement, which celebrates its 20th anniversary ...
Imanol Murua
doaj  

Northern Ireland: Devolution as an Electoral Issue in the 2015 UK General Election

open access: yesRevue Française de Civilisation Britannique, 2015
The 2015 General Election in Northern Ireland was set in the particular context of the Stormont House Agreement, which was reached on December 23, 2014, in a renewed attempt to make devolution in Northern Ireland, as defined in the 1998 “Good Friday ...
Valérie Peyronel
doaj   +1 more source

Mixité communautaire : cadre juridique d’un nouveau départ pour l’Irlande du Nord

open access: yesCahiers du MIMMOC, 2007
Signed on April 10, 1998, the Good Friday Agreement was intended to officialise the end to violence and offer a legal framework with a common aim which would bring together former enemies in a profoundly divided society.
Christian Mailhes
doaj   +1 more source

Richard Bean’s The Big Fellah (2010) and Jez Butterworth’s The Ferryman (2017): two plays about the Northern Troubles from outside of Northern Ireland

open access: yesIlha do Desterro, 2020
During the three decades of the Troubles of Northern Ireland (1969-1998), a remarkable amount of plays about the Troubles was written and almost of them, it seems, had been ‘monopolised’ by (Northern) Irish playwrights.
Hiroko Mikami
doaj   +1 more source

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