War and Peace
Ireland since the 1960s


Christine Kinealy

Over the past fifty years Ireland has been through a period of intense change, and has experienced both challenges and successes. In War and Peace: Ireland since the 1960s, historian Christine Kinealy explores the political triumphs and travails in Ireland over this period.

Kinealy provides a thorough and up-to-date account of the unfolding of The Troubles, the three decades of violence and social unrest between Catholic nationalists and Protestant unionists. She explores the Republic of Ireland’s entry into the European Union in 1973, its often contentious relationship with Britain, and the changes in rates of emigration to the USA and the rest of the world. The women’s movement in the 1970s and the successive election of two female presidents proved the Republic’s ability to accept and internalize social change, and despite Catholic Church scandals and Northern Ireland’s turbulence, this partitioned island has remained a significant presence on the world stage. Ireland’s economy has also transformed over the last fifty years: the phenomenon of the ‘Celtic Tiger’, the introduction of the euro, and Ireland’s current struggle with the global recession brings the story up to date.

This book presents a comprehensive panorama of the events that have shaped Ireland’s social and political landscape over the last fifty years. It will be essential reading for anyone interested in Ireland’s recent past, and how it will continue to develop in the future.

Christine Kinealy is Professor of History at the Caspersen Graduate School at Drew University in New Jersey. She is the author of many books, including Repeal and Revolution (2009) and The Great Famine in Ireland (2002).

War and Peace

216 x 138 mm
400 pages

Hardback
978 1 86189 779 4
August 2010
£25.00