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Negotiating a Settlement in Northern Ireland, 1969-2019 (Hardcover)
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Negotiating a Settlement in Northern Ireland, 1969-2019 (Hardcover)
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Negotiating a Settlement in Northern Ireland: From Sunningdale to
St Andrews uses original material from witness seminars, elite
interviews, and archive documents to explore the shape taken by the
Irish peace process, and in particular to analyse the manner in
which successful stages of this were negotiated. Northern Ireland's
Good Friday Agreement of 1998 marked the end a 30-year conflict
that had witnessed more than 3,000 deaths, thousands of injuries,
catastrophic societal damage, and large-scale economic dislocation.
This book traces the roots of the Agreement over the decades,
stretching back to the Sunningdale conference of 1973 and extending
up to at least the St Andrews Agreement of 2006. It describes the
changing relationship between parties to the conflict (nationalist
and unionist groups within Northern Ireland, and the Irish and
British governments) and identifies three dimensions of significant
change: new ways of implementing the concept of sovereignty,
growing acceptance of power sharing, and the steady emergence of
substantial equality in the socio-economic, cultural, and political
domains. As well as placing this in the context of an extensive
social science literature, the book innovates by looking at the
manner in which those most closely involved understood the process
in which they were engaged. The authors reproduce testimonies from
witness seminars and interviews involving central actors, including
former prime ministers, ministers, senior officials, and political
advisors. They conclude that the outcome was shaped by a
distinctive interaction between the conscious planning of these
elites and changing demographic and political realities that
themselves were, in a symbiotic way, consequences of decisions made
in earlier years. They also note the extent to which this
settlement has come under pressure from new notions of sovereignty
implicit in the Brexit process.
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