This book captures the complex and often contradictory realities of the
region's peace process. Across nine original essays, the authors provide a
critical and comprehensive reading of a society that seems to have left its
violent past behind but at the same time remains subject to its gravitational
pull. -- .
Though forced displacement constituted a central and pervasive feature of the
Northern Ireland ‘Troubles’ effecting tens of thousands of citizens,
remarkably it has been afforded little more than a footnote or fleeting
reference in most accounts of the conflict.
Ireland appears to be in the throes of a remarkable process of social change. The purpose of this book is to systematically scrutinize the interpretations and prescriptions that inform the deceptively simple metaphor of the "Celtic Tiger." The standpoint of the book is that a more critical approach to the course of development being followed by the Republic is urgently required. The essays collected here set out to expose the fallacies that drive the fashionable rhetoric of Tigerhood. Four of these fallacies--that Ireland has cast off the chains of economic dependency, that everyone is benefiting from the economic recovery, that personal freedom and liberty are at an unprecedented level for all citizens, and that Ireland is also experiencing a period of strong cultural renaissance--are vigorously challenged.