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Keywords: Irish Republican Army
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Chapter
Published: 01 March 2016
...This chapter discusses the role of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) in the formation of The Bell. Both Seán O’Faoláin and Peadar O’Donnell had seen active service as members of the IRA, as had many of those who also contributed to the magazine. The influence of politics will also...
Chapter
Published: 01 March 2009
...The collapse of the Irish Republican Army's (IRA) armed irredentist campaign in February 1962 led to the cessation of its military activities against the Northern Ireland state. The Campaign for Social Justice (CSJ) sought to highlight discrimination ‘against the Catholic section’ in housing...
Chapter
Published: 01 July 2015
... Ciaran Border Campaign 1956–62 Easter Rising remembrance Dalton Des Kelly Gerry Protestants Irish Republican Army Óglaigh na hÉireann armed struggle dissident republicanism Good Friday Agreement Northern Ireland political violence There is no republican violence. Republicanism is a non...
Chapter
Published: 01 December 2014
..., Éamon de Valera’s failure in uniting the political and militant Irish republican forces of Irish-America, and the burgeoning relationship between the IRA and the Clan na Gael. arms Buffalo NY Clan na Gael Dáil Éireann de Valera Éamon fundraising Germany Irish Republican Army IRA Leahy Michael...
Chapter
Published: 01 December 2014
...As the Irish Republican Army continued to become fractured with internal division and undermined by Fianna Fáil policies, the militant republican movement in Ireland became highly vulnerable. After IRA Chief of Staff Maurice Twomey was imprisoned in 1936, Seán Russell, the organisation’s...
Chapter
Published: 01 December 2014
...The outbreak of the Second World War severely debilitated the transnational networks related to militant republicanism. In Ireland, the Irish Republican Army was outlawed and lengthy internment was imposed on suspected republicans. In the US, the Clan na Gael was forced to contend with surveillance...
Chapter
Published: 01 December 2014
... movement was transformed by those Irish Republican Army veterans who arrived into American communities after the Irish Civil War. Aiken Frank American Association for the Recognition of the Irish Republic AARIR Clan na Gael de Valera Éamon Dillon Luke emigration Irish Civil War Irish Republican Army...
Book
Published online: 21 May 2015
Published in print: 01 December 2014
..., the work presents for the first time an account of the anti-Treaty Irish Republican Army (IRA) veterans who emigrated to the United States after the Irish Civil War. Upon their settlement in Irish-American communities, these republicans directly influenced and guided the US-based militant republican...
Chapter
Published: 01 April 2011
... to republicanism but antipathetic to Sinn Féin and the Irish Republican Army. The main vehicle for the new departure was the Wolfe Tone Society, which was established to organise events around the bicentenary of the birth of the founder of the United Irishmen. The objectives of the Society were the establishment...
Chapter
Published: 31 December 2006
... as Protestants’. Interviews with former members of the Irish Republican Army make it clear that they had all suffered as a result of their being caught up in conflict. There is tragedy, fear, moral confusion, pain and fragmentation at the heart of the interviewees' self-interpretations. A number...
Chapter
Published: 03 April 2017
... in Northern Ireland: partition and the British presence (Ibid.). In fact Cosgrave’s blaming of Republicans was at odds with the negotiating position which his government had adopted both during and after the Sunningdale conference. The Irish position was that Irish Republican Army (IRA) violence, while aimed...
Chapter
Published: 24 May 2010
... and demobilisation of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA), has been closely allied to the fortunes of SF, although not all former IRA prisoners are supportive of that particular political party. coalition government Democratic Unionist Party DUP Irish National Liberation Army INLA political status...
Chapter
Published: 17 August 2021
... circulated among disaffected Irish peoples and Irish Republican Army confrères, as historian Richard English has explained: Eire … adopted a neutral stance in the war, but the IRA took a pro-German (at times, anti-Jewish) approach. The army was committed to aiding the German war effort, and their leader Sean...
Book
Published online: 19 May 2016
Published in print: 01 September 2015
Book
Published online: 19 July 2012
Published in print: 31 December 2006
...Conducting an analysis of some of the most candid interview materials ever gathered from former Irish Republican Army (IRA) members and loyalists in Northern Ireland, this book demonstrates through a psychoanalysis of slips of the tongue, jokes, rationalisations and contradictions...
Chapter
Published: 01 April 2011
...This book looks at the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and Sinn Féin during the time between the 1956–1962 ‘border campaign’ and 1969. It examines developments within the Irish republican movement with regard to internal structural and ideological changes, but also in relation to the movement's...
Chapter
Published: 01 April 2011
... of the movement. Meade's proposal would have meant that members of Sinn Féin and the Irish Republican Army would have been part of the same organisation as members of the Irish Workers Party and the Communist Party of Northern Ireland and indeed some members of the Labour Party. When Meade resigned as editor...
Chapter
Published: 01 April 2011
...The real epilogue to the events and ideological debates described in this book was not only the armed conflict that lasted until the definitive Irish Republican Army (IRA) ceasefire in 1997, but also the political events culminating in the May 2007 agreement between Sinn Féin and the Democratic...
Chapter
Published: 01 April 2011
...The Irish Republican Army's (IRA) ‘border campaign’ of 1956–1962 occupies a peculiar place in the history of Irish republicanism. For republicans during the period, it was important in terms of assessing both why the campaign had failed and more importantly what lessons could be drawn from...
Chapter
Published: 01 April 2011
... having been passed to the Irish Republican Army's (IRA) Army Council in 1938 by the surviving anti-Treaty Sinn Féin members of the Dáil elected in 1923. Traditionalists, as represented today by Republican Sinn Féin and the Continuity IRA, still adhere to that belief. A proposal to abandon abstentionism...