Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 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:
- Index
- Plate section
Introduction
- Frontmatter
- 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:
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
The bulk of the essays in this book were delivered as part of Liverpool University's Institute of Irish Studies Peace Lecture Series, 1996–2000, and they have been left largely unchanged as reflecting opinion at the time they were given. The earlier lectures received generous sponsorship from the Irish Independent Newspaper Group and Lord David Owen's charity Humanitas. They are dedicated to Torkel Opsahl, the international human rights lawyer, who headed up the 1993 Opsahl Commission in Northern Ireland and died tragically early shortly afterwards, just as he was taking up his new post as head of the Bosnian War Crimes Commission in Geneva. The collection concludes with an appendix bringing together the key recommendations of the major agreements, commissions, government papers and so forth on Northern Ireland since Sunningdale. It does not pretend to be comprehensive, attempting rather to trace the long gestation of some of the key recommendations of the Good Friday Agreement.
The Institute of Irish Studies was established in 1988. As well as delivering a full degree programme, it has continued the role set out by its first Director, Professor Patrick Buckland, as a bridge between the cultures of Ireland and Britain, in particular providing a neutral forum for political debate. The Peace Lecture Series has been part of this tradition. It was initiated in 1996 by Sir George Quigley's ‘Achieving Transformational Change’, which, at a time when the idea was belatedly being accepted in Northern Ireland, looked at the role of a ‘third party’ or external agency in areas of conflict.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Long Road to Peace in Northern IrelandPeace Lectures from the Institute of Irish Studies at Liverpool University, pp. 3 - 10Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2007
- 1
- Cited by