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The three Irish monetary redress programmes this chapter explores are a study in contrasts. The industrial schools programme (the RIRB) began in 2003. The cost of that large programme prompted the 2014 advent of Caranua, an ancillary programme redressing the consequences of injurious care. Caranua was preceded in 2013 by a programme responding to structural injuries suffered by survivors of the Magdalene laundries. The differences in costs and size, and the difficulties confronted in delivering these Irish programmes provide valuable evidence for comparative analysis.
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