Provisional Irish republicans : an oral and interpretive history
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Provisional Irish republicans : an oral and interpretive history
(Contributions in political science, no. 309)
Greenwood Press, 1993
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
\Why do people commit violent acts? This indepth case study of Provisional Irish Republicans, based primarily on interviews with activists, goes a long way toward explaining small group political violence. This unique oral history is valuable not only for those concerned with Irish or British politics but also for those in many social science disciplines and the entire sub-field of terrorism and political violence. This is interesting reading that makes the Irish political activists come alive.
The case study opens with a history of the IRA and the Provisional Irish Republican Army and Provisional Sinn Fein since 1969. The people who participate in the republican movement are described in vivid detail; they tell about themselves and how they were recruited. The findings, implications, and a mobilization/political process perspective are analyzed carefully.
Table of Contents
- Understanding Small-Group Political Violence
- Irish History, Irish Rebels - Predecessors of the Provisional Irish Republican Army
- Commitment, Tradition, and Revolution
- Peaceful Protest, State Violence, and the Working-Class
- Nationalism, Northern Events and the Irish Republic
- Recruitment, Interaction and Perceptions of Republicanism - Forces of Change and Inertia
- Theoretical Issues and Implications - Continued Violence in Ireland
- The Violent Field - Data Collection Procedures.
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