Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- List of Illustrations
- Introduction to Revised Edition
- Introduction
- Achieving Transformational Change
- The Resolution of Armed Conflict: Internationalization and its Lessons, Particularly in Northern Ireland
- Some Reflections on Successful Negotiation in South Africa
- The Secrets of the Oslo Channels: Lessons from Norwegian Peace Facilitation in the Middle East, Central America and the Balkans
- The Awakening: Irish-America's Key Role in the Irish Peace Process
- ‘Give Us Another MacBride Campaign’: An Irish-American Contribution to Peaceful Change in Northern Ireland
- Towards Peace in Northern Ireland
- Neither Orange March nor Irish Jig: Finding Compromise in Northern Ireland
- Mountain-climbing Irish-style: The Hidden Challenges of the Peace Process
- The Good Friday Agreement: A Vision for a New Order in Northern Ireland
- Hillsborough to Belfast: Is It the Final Lap?
- Defining Republicanism: Shifting Discourses of New Nationalism and Post-republicanism
- Conflict, Memory and Reconciliation
- Keeping Going: Beyond Good Friday
- Religion and Identity in Northern Ireland
- Getting to Know the ‘Other’: Inter-church Groups and Peace-building in Northern Ireland
- Enduring Problems: The Belfast Agreement and a Disagreed Belfast
- Appendices: Key Recommendations of
- 1 The Sunningdale Agreement (December 1973)
- 2 The Anglo-Irish (Hillsborough) Agreement (November 1985)
- 3 The Opsahl Commission (June 1993)
- 4 The Downing Street Joint Declaration (December 1993)
- 5 The Framework Document (1995)
- 6 The Good Friday (Belfast) Agreement (April 1998)
- 7 The Report of the Northern Ireland Victims Commission (Sir Kenneth Bloom.eld, 1998)
- 8 The Patten Report (1999)
- 9 Review of the Parades Commission (Sir George Quigley, 2002)
- Index
- Images
Introduction to Revised Edition
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- List of Illustrations
- Introduction to Revised Edition
- Introduction
- Achieving Transformational Change
- The Resolution of Armed Conflict: Internationalization and its Lessons, Particularly in Northern Ireland
- Some Reflections on Successful Negotiation in South Africa
- The Secrets of the Oslo Channels: Lessons from Norwegian Peace Facilitation in the Middle East, Central America and the Balkans
- The Awakening: Irish-America's Key Role in the Irish Peace Process
- ‘Give Us Another MacBride Campaign’: An Irish-American Contribution to Peaceful Change in Northern Ireland
- Towards Peace in Northern Ireland
- Neither Orange March nor Irish Jig: Finding Compromise in Northern Ireland
- Mountain-climbing Irish-style: The Hidden Challenges of the Peace Process
- The Good Friday Agreement: A Vision for a New Order in Northern Ireland
- Hillsborough to Belfast: Is It the Final Lap?
- Defining Republicanism: Shifting Discourses of New Nationalism and Post-republicanism
- Conflict, Memory and Reconciliation
- Keeping Going: Beyond Good Friday
- Religion and Identity in Northern Ireland
- Getting to Know the ‘Other’: Inter-church Groups and Peace-building in Northern Ireland
- Enduring Problems: The Belfast Agreement and a Disagreed Belfast
- Appendices: Key Recommendations of
- 1 The Sunningdale Agreement (December 1973)
- 2 The Anglo-Irish (Hillsborough) Agreement (November 1985)
- 3 The Opsahl Commission (June 1993)
- 4 The Downing Street Joint Declaration (December 1993)
- 5 The Framework Document (1995)
- 6 The Good Friday (Belfast) Agreement (April 1998)
- 7 The Report of the Northern Ireland Victims Commission (Sir Kenneth Bloom.eld, 1998)
- 8 The Patten Report (1999)
- 9 Review of the Parades Commission (Sir George Quigley, 2002)
- Index
- Images
Summary
In this new edition of The Long Road to Peace in Northern Ireland, former contributors have been given the opportunity to add postscripts, two new essays have been commissioned, and the appendices enlarged. I have added sections of the Opsahl Commission report and Sir George Quigley's Review of the Parades Commission (2002), which address the issues of religion, cultural identity and sectarianism, and have dedicated this edition to Torkel Opsahl and Eric Gallagher, fellow commissioner on the Opsahl Commission. Eric Gallagher was one of the four Protestant clergymen who met the IRA at Feakle in County Clare in 1974. He spent a lifetime trying to overcome the sectarianism that continues to make peace so precarious.
Despite the return of devolved government to Northern Ireland and signs of former extremes working together harmoniously, the mood is more sombre in these additions than five years ago, reflecting a recognition that the inflated expectations of what the Good Friday Agreement could deliver were unrealistic. Peter Shirlow, while recognizing the real achievements of the peace process – not least the 74 per cent decline in the murder rate – highlights the urgency of seriously tackling increasing polarization and sectarianism in Belfast (only 17.7 per cent now living in mixed areas). The Agreement over-emphasized high politics and ‘merely managed polarization’, while the whole ‘edifice’ of sectarianism was ignored. George Quigley too – drawing on his review of the Parades Commission in 2002 – reaches a similar conclusion: the Agreement ‘raised the bar high, requiring enforced fraternity at the top while there was a serious lack of fraternity at the base’.
I do not entirely share Peter Shirlow's pessimism that ‘the conflict cannot be resolved’, although I too have argued that if sectarianism is not seriously tackled, a revival of serious communal violence is a real danger. In the first edition of this collection, many argued that though the war in Northern Ireland was over, the conflict was not (Cox), and that peace-making is a lengthy, evolutionary process, rather than something confined to an initial agreement. Some of the essays (Owen, Mitchell, O'Dowd) pointed to the role of outside agencies, prepared to ‘think the unthinkable and thereby progress events hitherto unimaginable’. Unfortunately, some of those agencies – notably the United States – have become more muted. The consequent internalization of the problem risks privileging traditional sectarian politics.
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- The Long Road to Peace in Northern IrelandPeace Lectures from the Institute of Irish Studies at Liverpool University, pp. 1 - 2Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2007