Format:
1 Online-Ressource (408 pages)
ISBN:
9780716531876
Content:
Front Matter -- title page -- dedication page -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- List of Abbreviations -- Note on Primary Sources -- Index of Key Terms and Political Bodies -- Introduction -- A gap in the histriography: Fianna Fáil, partition and Northern Ireland, 1926-1971 -- The Fianna Fáil elite, partition and Northern Ireland -- CHAPTER ONE: 1926-1937 -- Fianna Fáil, Irish unity and anti-partitionism, 1926-1932 -- Ideology vs. pragmatism: Fianna Fáil as a Northern Ireland political party -- Partition and 'realism': Fianna Fáil in government, 1932-1937 -- Fianna Fáil, the British government and partition, 1932-1937 -- Fianna Fáil, physical force and the IRA, 1926-1936 -- The 1937 Irish constitution and partition -- CHAPTER TWO: 1938-1945 -- The Anglo-Irish Agreement and the Fianna Fáil National Executive, 1938~1939 -- The Fianna Fáil anti-partition sub-committee, 1938 -- The formation of the Anti-Partition of Ireland League of Great Britain -- De Valera's federal proposal, October 1938 -- The Donnelly-camp of Fianna Fáil challenge de Valera's Northern Ireland policy -- The termination of the Anti-Partition of Ireland League of Great Britian and the re-emergence of the IRA 1939 -- The internal debate: the emergency, Fianna Fáil and Northern Ireland, 1939-1940 -- Constitutionalists vs. militants: Fianna Fáil and the IRA, 1939-1945 -- The June 1940 'offer': De Valera, Fianna Fáil anti-partitionists and Northern Nationalists -- CHAPTER THREE: 1945-1951 -- An idea reborn: the genesis of de Valera's worldwide anti-partition campaign, 1945-1946 -- One step forward, two steps backwards: Fianna Fáil and Northern Nationalists, 1945-1948 -- Dev's tour, stage 1: from New York to New Dehli, March - June 1948 -- Dev's tour, stage 2: Ireland & Britain, October 1948 - March 1949 -- De Valera's reaction to the repeal of the external relations Act
Content:
'Total propaganda': The All-Party Anti-Partition Committee -- 'You have carved up our country': de Valera and the Ireland Act -- CHAPTER FOUR: 1951-1955 -- Partition beyond the 'sore thumb' approach -- From opposition rhetoric to realpolitik: Fianna Fáil and North-South co-operation -- Fianna Fáil, the Anti-Partition of Ireland League of Great Britain and Northern Nationalists -- Northern Ireland and the 'Dominion status' debate -- The IRA, partition and Northern Ireland: The Fianna Fáil hierarchy vs. grass-roots -- A lost opportunity: The National Executive standing-committee on partition matters -- Partition memoranda issued by the Tomas Ó Cléirigh cumann, Dublin North-East and by Matthew Feehan -- Partition memorandum issued on behalf of the standing-committee on partition matters, April 1955 -- CHAPTER FIVE: 1956-1961 -- 'Conditional constitutionalists': Fianna Fáil, Northern Ireland and the IRA border-campaign, 1956-1959 -- Fianna Fáil and 'the Offences Against the State Act', July 1957 -- Perception vs. reality: de Valera, Lemass and Northern Ireland -- Out of touch with political realities: de Valera, a 'British declaration' and the Comonwealth 'debate' -- 'A new look at the old policy of partition': Seán Lemass and Northern Ireland, 1959-1961 -- Lemass and the evolution of terminology: from a 'Six-Counties' to a 'Northern Ireland' policy -- A relic of the failed Anti-Partition campaign: Fianna Fáil, the Anti-Partition of Ireland League of Great Britain and Northern Nationalists, 1956-1961 -- CHAPTER SIX: 1962-1965 -- 'a sin too far': Lemass, the IRA and Northern Ireland, 1961-1962 -- Flying Kites and the 'de facto' recognition of Northern Ireland: The Shelbourne symposium, April 1963 -- 'De facto' recognition of Northern Ireland: Lemass's Tralee speech, July 1963 -- The 'principle of consent' and Lemass's Arklow speech, April 1964
Content:
The Lemass-O'Neill meeting: the culmination for Lemass of ten years' of policy developments towards Northern Ireland -- The reaction of Fianna Fáil cabinet ministers, backbench Tds and grass-roots to the Lemass-O'Neill meeting -- Abstentionism and discrimination: Lemass and Northern Nationalists, 1962-1965 -- CHAPTER SEVEN: 1966-1971 -- The 1966 Easter Rising commemorations and the deterioration of North-South relations -- Jack Lynch and Northern Ireland, 1966-1969 -- Fianna Fáil and the Battle of the Bogside, August 1969 'By peaceful means': Lynch's Tralee speech -- 'By peaceful means': Lynch Tralee speech and the McCann memorandum -- Fianna Fáil and the Arms Crisis -- Jack Lynch, Northern Nationalists and the SDLP, 1966-1971 -- 'Ye can have Boland, but you cannot have Fianna Fáil': The 1971 Fianna Fáil Ard Fheis -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index
Additional Edition:
9780716531838
Additional Edition:
Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Kelly, Stephen Fianna Fail, Partition and Northern Ireland,1926-1971 Portland : Irish Academic Press,c2014 9780716531838
Language:
English
URL:
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