2,833
Views
4
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Is a middle force emerging in Northern Ireland?

ORCID Icon

References

  • Agarin, T. (2020). The limits of inclusion: Representation of minority and non-dominant communities in consociational and liberal democracies. International Political Science Review, 41(1), 15–29.
  • Agarin, T., & McCulloch, A. (2020). How power-sharing includes and excludes non-dominant minorities: Introduction to the special issue. International Political Science Review, 41(1), 3–14.
  • Agarin, T., McCulloch, A., & Murtagh, C. (2018). Others in deeply divided societies: A research agenda. Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 24(3), 299–310.
  • Breen, R., & Hayes, B. C. (1997). Religious mobility and party support in Northern Ireland. European Sociological Review, 13(3), 225–239.
  • Coakley, J. (2002). Religion, national identity and political change in modern Ireland. Irish Political Studies, 17(1), 4–28.
  • Coakley, J. (2007). National identity in Northern Ireland: Stability or change? Nations and Nationalism, 13(4), 573–597.
  • Coakley, J. (2011). The religious roots of Irish nationalism. Social Compass, 58(1), 95–114.
  • Coakley, J. (2016). Does Ulster still say no? Public opinion and the future of Northern Ireland. In J. A. Elkink & D. M. Farrell (Eds.), The act of Voting: Identities, Institutions and Locale (pp. 35–55). London: Routledge.
  • Compton, P. (1985). An evaluation of the changing religious composition of the population of Northern Ireland. Economic and Social Review, 16(3), 201–224.
  • Dixon, P. (2018). What politicians can teach academics: ‘Real’ politics, consociationalism and the Northern Ireland conflict. In M. Jakala, D. Kuzu, & M. Qvortrup (Eds.), Consociationalism and Power-Sharing in Europe: Arend Lijphart’s Theory of Political Accommodation (pp. 55–83). London: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Dornschneider, S., & Todd, J. (2020). Everyday sentiment among unionists and nationalists in a Northern Irish town. Irish Political Studies, 35. doi:10.1080/07907184.2020.1743023
  • Evans, J. A., & Tonge, J. (2003). The future of the ‘radical centre’ in Northern Ireland after the Good Friday Agreement. Political Studies, 51(1), 26–50.
  • Ganiel, G. (2016). Secularisation, ecumenism and identity on the island of Ireland. In J. C. Wood (Ed.), Christianity and National Identity in 20th Century Europe (pp. 73–89). Gottingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.
  • Hayes, B. C., & McAllister, I. (1995). Religious independents in Northern Ireland: Origins, attitudes, and significance. Review of Religious Research, 37(1), 65–83.
  • Hayes, B. C., & McAllister, I. (2009). Religion, identity and community relations among adults and young adults in Northern Ireland. Journal of Youth Studies, 12(4), 385–403.
  • Hayward, K. (2020). The 2019 general election in Northern Ireland: The rise of the centre ground? Political Quarterly, 91(1), 49–55.
  • Hayward, K., & McManus, C. (2019). Neither/Nor: The rejection of unionist and nationalist identities in post-agreement Northern Ireland. Capital and Class, 43(1), 139–155.
  • Hayward, K., & Rosher, B. (2020). Political attitudes at a time of flux [ARK Research Update 133, June]. Belfast: ARK, Queen’s University Belfast.
  • McAuley, J. W., & Tonge, J. (2010). Britishness (and Irishness) in Northern Ireland since the Good Friday Agreement. Parliamentary Affairs, 63(2), 266–285.
  • McNicholl, K. (2018). Political constructions of a cross-community identity in a divided society: How politicians articulate Northern Irishness. National Identities, 20(5), 495–513.
  • McNicholl, K. (2019). The Northern Irish identity: Attitudes towards moderate political parties and outgroup leaders. Irish Political Studies, 34(1), 25–47.
  • McNicholl, K., Stevenson, C., & Garry, J. (2019). How the 'Northern Irish' national identity is understood and used by young people and politicians. Political Psychology, 40(3), 487–505.
  • Mitchell, C. (2006a). Religion, Identity and Politics in Northern Ireland: Boundaries of Belonging and Belief. Aldershot: Ashgate.
  • Mitchell, C. (2006b). The religious content of ethnic identities. Sociology, 40(6), 1135–1152.
  • Mitchell, D. (2018). Non-nationalist politics in a bi-national consociation: The case of the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland. Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 24(3), 336–347.
  • Moxon-Browne, E. (1983). Nation, Class and Creed in Northern Ireland. Aldershot: Gower.
  • Moxon-Browne, E. (1991). National identity in Northern Ireland. In P. Stringer & G. Robinson (Eds.), Social Attitudes in Northern Ireland 1990–91 (pp. 23–38). Belfast: Blackstaff.
  • Muldoon, O. T., McNamara, N., Devine, P., & Trew, K. (2008). Beyond gross divisions: National and religious identity combinations [ARK Research Update 58, December]. Belfast: ARK, Queen’s University Belfast.
  • Muldoon, O. T., Trew, K., Todd, J., Rougier, N., & McLaughlin, K. (2007). Religious and national identity after the Belfast Good Friday Agreement. Political Psychology, 28(1), 89–103.
  • Murtagh, C. (2020). The plight of civic parties in divided societies. International Political Science Review, 41(1), 73–88.
  • NISRA. (2013). Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency. A note on the background to the religion and ‘religion brought up in’ questions in the census, and their analysis in 2001 and 2011. Retrieved from www.nisra.gov.uk/archive/census/2011/ Background_to_the_religion_ question_2011.pdf
  • NISRA. (2020). Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency. 2011 Census. Retrieved from https://www.nisra.gov.uk/statistics/census/2011-census
  • O’Leary, B. (2019). A Treatise on Northern Ireland: Vol. 1: Colonialism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Rose, R. (1971). Governing Without Consensus: An Irish Perspective. London: Faber and Faber.
  • Stojanović, N. (2018). Political marginalization of ‘others’ in consociational regimes. Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Politikwissenschaft, 12(2), 341–364.
  • Taylor, R. (2006). The Belfast agreement and the politics of consociationalism: A critique. Political Quarterly, 77(2), 217–226.
  • Todd, J. (2018). Identity Change After Conflict: Ethnicities, Boundaries and Belonging in the Two Irelands. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Todd, J., O’Keefe, T., Rougier, N., & CañásBottos, L. (2006). Fluid or frozen? Choice and change in ethno-national identification in contemporary Northern Ireland. Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 12(3-4), 323–346.
  • Tonge, J., & Gomez, R. (2015). Shared identity and the end of conflict? How far has a common sense of ‘Northern Irishness’ replaced British or Irish allegiances since the 1998 Good Friday Agreement? Irish Political Studies, 30(2), 276–298.
  • Wilford, R. (2010). Northern Ireland: The politics of constraint. Parliamentary Affairs, 63(1), 134–155.
  • Wilson, R. (2009). From consociationalism to interculturalism. In R. Taylor (Ed.), Consociational Theory: McGarry and O’Leary and the Northern Ireland Problem (pp. 221–236). London: Routledge.