Description |
1 online resource |
|
text file |
Note |
Introduction 1 Background: British Labour and Northern Ireland 1964-74 2 The collapse of power-sharing 3 Drift? 4 Negotiating the Provisional IRA ceasefire 5 Fraying at the edges: the Provisional IRA ceasefire 6 After the ceasefire 7 Police primacy and the myth of Ulsterisation 8 'Positive direct rule': economic policy 9 Political inertia 10 The evolution of the long war Conclusion Index. |
Contents |
Cover; Title page; Copyright page; Dedication; Contents; Figures and tables; Acknowledgements; Abbreviations; Introduction; Notes; 1 Background: British Labour and Northern Ireland, 1964-74; Internal reform; The escalation of violence; Direct rule and security; Sunningdale and Labour; Notes; 2 The collapse of power-sharing; Reactions to the election; Security policy; Contingency planning and withdrawal; The Ulster Workers' Council strike; Conclusion; Notes; 3 Drift?; Doomsday plans and the Convention; Security policy after Sunningdale; Birmingham; Ceasefire preparations; Conclusion; Notes. |
|
4 Negotiating the Provisional IRA ceasefireResponding to the Provisionals; Dialogue with the Provisionals; The reaction of the security forces; Constitutional politics and the ceasefire; Labour's expectations; Conclusion; Notes; 5 Fraying at the edges: the Provisional IRA ceasefire; The dialogue; Sectarian violence and the Convention elections; The army and the RUC; Stuttering contact; Security legislation and the return to talks; The drift back to violence; The Convention and the ceasefire; The breakdown of the ceasefire; Conclusion; Notes; 6 After the ceasefire; The Convention. |
|
Security policyThe resumption of conflict; Indefinite direct rule; Conclusion; Notes; 7 Police primacy and the myth of Ulsterisation; The Bourn proposals; Army frustration; Roy Mason and 'semi-detention'; Implementing the Bourn proposals; Ulsterisation; Westminster; The UUAC strike; Intensification; The Pritchard review; Conclusion; Notes; 8 'Positive direct rule': economic policy; The economy and the conflict; Assisting industry; The economic crisis in Britain; Developing a strategy; Mason's big push; Conclusion; Notes; 9 Political inertia; After the Convention; Administrative devolution. |
|
Deals at WestminsterThe SDLP; Interim devolution; Jack Lynch; Northern Ireland representation; La Mon and the Republic of Ireland; 'Neutrality'; Conclusion; Notes; 10 The evolution of the long war; The Provisional IRA; Pressures for change; The SAS and 'shoot-to-kill'; The prisons; Police interrogation; The fall of the Labour government; Conclusion; Notes; Conclusion; Notes; Bibliography; Government archives; Private papers; Official publications; Newspapers and periodicals; Documentaries; Books, articles and theses; Index. |
Summary |
No solution demonstrates the naivety of claims that a solution to the Northern Ireland conflict could have been imposed by the British state two decades before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. It also argues that while there is a tremendous volume of material written on the Northern Ireland conflict, areas remain where there is a poverty of understanding. |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 254-264) and index. |
Local Note |
eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America |
Subject |
Northern Ireland -- Politics and government -- 1968-1998.
|
|
Northern Ireland. |
|
Politics and government. |
Chronological Term |
1968-1998 |
Subject |
Great Britain -- Relations -- Northern Ireland.
|
|
Great Britain. |
|
Relations. |
|
Northern Ireland -- Relations -- Great Britain.
|
|
Great Britain -- Politics and government -- 1964-1979.
|
Chronological Term |
1964-1979 |
|
1964-1998 |
Genre/Form |
Electronic books.
|
Other Form: |
Print version: 9780719096402 |
ISBN |
9781526108272 (electronic book) |
|
1526108275 (electronic book) |
|
9781526108265 (electronic book) |
|
1526108267 (electronic book) |
|
9781526120854 |
|
1526120852 |
|
9780719096402 (hardback) |
|
0719096405 |
|