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Keywords: loyalism
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Chapter
Published: 01 January 2016
... Curwen John Christian Methodism Barnsley chapels churches Dewsbury Epstein James Haslingden Huddersfield Otley Liverpool xiv loyalism Wigan Chester Kendal Lancaster Sheffield Ulverston Warrington elections marketplaces Whigs Fitzwilliam Earl Harrison Reverend Joseph Ward Thomas...
Chapter
Published: 03 April 2017
... flourished, generating some of the more unpropitious images associated with Loyalism thereafter. This situation may also be understood, as a recent work on global crime couches it, as a by-product of ‘unimaginative politicians who lack either the vision or the interest to address the great structural...
Chapter
Politically motivated prisoners in Northern Ireland
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Peter Shirlow and others
Published: 24 May 2010
... process and demilitarisation was either a rejection of violence as being terrorist-inspired and that previous military activity lacked ideological reason or that the discursive value of loyalism or republicanism had been abandoned. Republican consciousness, as it pertained to demilitarisation...
Chapter
‘Remember the women’: memory-making within loyalism
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Lisa Faulkner-Byrne and others
Published: 31 January 2023
... Troubles gender parity; Ulster loyalism; UDA; UVF; Pierre Bourdieu; memory work; Lee Smithey Since the Good Friday Agreement, community development and peacebuilding efforts have focused on the men in our area. The fact is that women were never really part of the problem here, so they are not seen as part...
Book
Troubles of the Past? History, Identity and Collective Memory in Northern Ireland
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James W. McAuley (ed.) and others
Published online: 21 September 2023
Published in print: 31 January 2023
Book
Published online: 21 January 2016
Published in print: 01 August 2015
... of life, active reminders of the continuing reality of the division, fear and anger still deeply felt in the long shadows of the peace walls. Paramilitary Loyalism: Identity and Change takes a provocative second look at this enduring aspect of Northern Ireland’s post-conflict world. Based...
Chapter
Published: 31 January 2023
... United Kingdom Brexit Colombia Marquez Gabriel Garcia collective memory Commemoration Connerton Paul Northern Ireland; collective memory; popular cultures; generational transmission; peace processes; Ulster loyalism; Irish republicanism When the Consultative Group on the Past (CGP) published its...
Chapter
Published: 01 November 2014
... for support and funding. associational culture Church societies Canadian ethnicity freemasonry loyalism Orange Order Roman Catholics St George's societies voluntarism colonial clergy migration St Patrick's societies Upper Canada Canada West Whigs Canterbury Association clergy reserves...
Chapter
Introduction
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Peter Shirlow and others
Published: 24 May 2010
... of the peace process which failed to take account of why so many former prisoners supported the 1998 Good Friday Agreement was incomplete. It also explores why conflict ended amid ideological continuity not change, with emphasis on loyalism and republicanism. Moreover, the book highlights the importance...
Chapter
Ulster loyalism, memory and commemoration
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James W. McAuley and others
Published: 31 January 2023
... Connerton Paul Andy Tyrie Interpretative Centre Ex Prisoners Interpretative Centre EPIC Irish republicans collective memory and identity Ulster loyalism; UDA; UVF; collective memory; loyalist identity; Daniel Bar-Tal [I]t is not the truth which matters in Northern Ireland, but what people believe...
Chapter
William Richardson: popular loyalism and the politics of Protestant Ascendancy
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Allan Blackstock
Published: 01 May 2013
... of 1798. The chapter investigates Richardson's reactions to plebeian Orangeism and his crucial role in the Irish Yeomanry's formation in 1796. It explores how he helped mobilise loyalism on the ground and simultaneously influences MPs at Westminster to support Protestant Ascendancy. The argument...
Chapter
Imprisonment, ideological development and change
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Peter Shirlow and others
Published: 24 May 2010
... as another site of struggle, republican prisoners helped shape the direction of their movement, although the precise extent of influence remains disputed. Loyalist prisoners were disoriented by the experience of imprisonment by the state they purported to defend and loyalism struggled, within and beyond...
Chapter
Conclusion
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Joseph Hardwick
Published: 01 November 2014
..., disciplined and uniform Anglican Church. The conclusion also assesses where we should place the Church of England in existing narratives of colonial expansion. From some angles the colonial Church does look like a conservative institution that was aligned with the forces of loyalism and reaction; but from...
Chapter
The Ulster Workers’ Council strike: the perfect storm
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Gordon Gillespie
Published: 03 April 2017
... (Belfast Telegraph 16 May 1974). In the House of Commons meanwhile a frustrated Merlyn Rees told the South Down Unionist MP Lawrence (Willie) Orr that Loyalists in Northern Ireland might soon have to face the question of whether their Loyalism would lead them into confrontation with British troops...
Chapter
Spaces of exclusion and intrusion in the 1790s
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Katrina Navickas
Published: 01 January 2016
...The French Revolution polarised popular politics in England. This chapter examines the rise of working-class radical societies and the response by loyalist elites in the 1790s. It argues that loyalism involved enforcing processes of exclusion and intrusion. Radicals were excluded from meeting...