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Agreement - The State, Conflict and Change in Northern Ireland (Paperback, New)
Loot Price: R573
Discovery Miles 5 730
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Agreement - The State, Conflict and Change in Northern Ireland (Paperback, New)
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Loot Price R573
Discovery Miles 5 730
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Published ten years after the Good Friday Agreement, this book is
about the people, ideas and movements that created it. But it is
also about its limits; how the Agreement's promise was frequently
betrayed by an establishment that found it difficult to give up its
dominance. Campbell documents the forces strongly resisting change,
including those inside the police, military and secret services
whose refusal to repudiate their long history of collusion
prevented them from contributing to peace-making. Gender is woven
into the texture of this story - from the men who sought to
dominate the streets to the women who fought for the equality
agenda. The book has an inspired sense of people making their own
history, and is full of their stories. These are people whose
contribution was from the grassroots - loyalist ex-combatant Gusty
Spence, the PPU's Dawn Purvis, Unison's Inez McCormack, Thomas
Donahue of the AFL-CIO, Father Aidan Troy of Holy Cross School, to
name only a few. It is on the efforts of people such as these that
the success of the new state will continue to depend. 'The spinners
of history are rarely the makers of history. The real story of
Ireland's journey to peace and justice is murkier, more treacherous
and often more inspirational than our political masters would have
us believe. Bea Campbell is a great chronicler of our times: humane
and politically astute, with a keen understanding of the double
dealing, interplay and courage that underpinned the long peace
process, which was really won by ordinary men and unsung women in
Northern Ireland.' Helena Kennedy 'Outstanding ... an impressive
and insightful book. The story of international diplomacy and
political deals has been told elsewhere, but this details another
story, about the contribution of civil society, the women's
movement and a "coalition of the committed" to a unique
constitutional moment, and to the means by which the state might
reinterpret itself and be changed.' Professor John Morison
General
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