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This book is the first to provide an in-depth discussion of crime in Ireland from 1870 to 1920. It looks afresh at the topic of crime in the 1870-1920 period, examining agrarian offences as one part of a more general study of lawbreaking by 'ordinary' Irish people and those whom the police categorised as Ireland's 'criminal classes'. While agrarian crime was an important and distinctive phenomenon, it is important to bear in mind that it was merely one aspect of Ireland's crime story in this period. Most crimes committed in Ireland were non-agrarian in nature, and in the countryside most offences were relatively minor in character: most of the country's serious or indictable crimes were committed in Ireland's towns and cities, with Dublin featuring especially highly in the annual crime statistics. Many crimes in urban areas were carried out by child or juvenile offenders, who sometimes formed themselves into gangs for their own protection. An examination of the crimes committed by the country's 'criminal classes' - prostitutes, drunkards, thieves and vagrants - and other offenders shows how unremarkable most Irish crime was by international standards.
Trade Union Renewal examines the current state of the Irish Trade Union movement, the reasons for its decline and how it must re-imagine itself as a force capable of rolling back the frontiers of capital if it is to rally a new generation of workers to the cause of labour.
This compendium of essays offers revealing insights into literary representations of spatial domains, including the religious colony, the pastoral, the city, the house, and the shoreline, and suggestive analyses of feminist and postfeminist perspectives on the subject, feminist identity, mother-daughter bonds, contemporary masculinity, and sibling relationships.
"'Twenty-five years later "Moral Uncertainty" tells the story ... of what went on inside both of those jury rooms."--Page four of cover.
The first comprehensive account of unionist politics from the Anglo-Irish Agreement through to the forum elections and multi-party talks in 1996.
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