Tables, Figures, and Illustrations Acknowledgments Note on Terminology Political Violence and Conflict Resolution in Northern Ireland by Alan O'Day Fin de Siècle, 1972: The Provisional IRA's Strategy and the Beginning of the Eight Thousand Day Stalemate by M.L.R. Smith Have the Northern Ireland Ceasefires of 1994 Ended "Zero Sum Game" and Mirrored Thinking? by Richard Davis Bigots in Bowler Hats? Unionism Since the Downing Street Declaration, 1993-1995 by D. George Boyce Dropping Slow: The Emergence of the Irish Peace Process, by Jim Smyth Paramilitary Prisoners and the Peace Process in Northern Ireland by Jonathan Moore Making Peace Work by Paul Bew Gender, Citizenship, and National Identity in Northern Ireland by G. Honor Fagan and Ronnie Munck Political Conflict, Partition, and the Underdevelopment of the Irish Economy by Maura Sheehan, Douglas Hamilton, and Ronnie Munck Writing Terrorism Out of the Story: Sunday Life and "War Weariness" in Northern Island by Michael Bromley Political Violence: The Overspill from Northern Ireland by Michael A. Poole Appendix 1: Government of Ireland Act, 1920 Appendix 2: Articles of Agreement for a Treaty between Great Britain and Ireland Appendix 3: Constitution of 1937 Appendix 4: Communiqué and Declaration on Employment of Troops in Northern Ireland Appendix 5: The Anglo-Irish Agreement, 15 November 1985 Appendix 6: The Downing Street Declaration, 15 December 1993 Appendix 7: Framework Document, February 1995 Appendix 8: Report of the International Body Select Bibliography Index About the Editor and Contributors
Assesses the causes and nature of violence in Northern Ireland and considers the possibilities for peace.
ALAN O'DAY is a Senior Lecturer at the University of North London and an honorary Professor of History at Concordia University, Montreal./e He has taught at universities in Britain, Canada, and Germany, and has authored, edited, and co-edited twenty books and published numerous articles in the areas of Irish history and politics. During 1996-97 he is a visiting Professor at the Unviersity of Dublin (Trinity College).
?[A]lan O'Day has edited yet another high-quality collection of
essays in Political Violence in Northern Ireland: Conflict and
Conflict Resolution.?-Book Reviews
"�A�lan O'Day has edited yet another high-quality collection of
essays in Political Violence in Northern Ireland: Conflict and
Conflict Resolution."-Book Reviews
"[A]lan O'Day has edited yet another high-quality collection of
essays in Political Violence in Northern Ireland: Conflict and
Conflict Resolution."-Book Reviews
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