No solution demonstrates the naivety of claims that a solution to the Northern Ireland conflict could have been imposed by the British state two decades before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. While there is a tremendous volume of material written on the Northern Ireland conflict, areas remain where there is a poverty of understanding. -- .
No solution demonstrates the naivety of claims that a solution to the Northern Ireland conflict could have been imposed by the British state two decades before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. While there is a tremendous volume of material written on the Northern Ireland conflict, areas remain where there is a poverty of understanding. -- .
S.C. Aveyard is a Senior Lecturer in Modern British History at Manchester Metropolitan History
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. Background: British Labour and Northern Ireland 1964-74 2. The collapse of power-sharing 3. Drift? 4. Negotiating the Provisional IRA ceasefire 5. Fraying at the edges: the Provisional IRA ceasefire 6. After the ceasefire 7. Police primacy and the myth of Ulsterisation 8. 'Positive direct rule': economic policy 9. Political inertia 10. The evolution of the long war Conclusion Index
Introduction 1. Background: British Labour and Northern Ireland 1964-74 2. The collapse of power-sharing 3. Drift? 4. Negotiating the Provisional IRA ceasefire 5. Fraying at the edges: the Provisional IRA ceasefire 6. After the ceasefire 7. Police primacy and the myth of Ulsterisation 8. 'Positive direct rule': economic policy 9. Political inertia 10. The evolution of the long war Conclusion Index
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