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Shaun McDaid - Template for Peace: Northern Ireland, 1972–75

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Shaun McDaid Template for Peace: Northern Ireland, 1972–75
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Template for Peace: Northern Ireland, 1972–75: summary, description and annotation

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This book examines the creation and collapse of the first power-sharing administration in Northern Ireland, and British government policy during the period 1972-75. It also analyses the relationship between the British and Irish states during the 1972-75 period. Drawing on recently released archival sources, this book sheds new light on the events of this turbulent period, and questions many core assumptions about the political dynamics of the time. In particular, it challenges existing interpretations of the relationship between the Irish government and the representatives of constitutional nationalism in Northern Ireland and security co-operation between the British and Irish states. It revises the widely held view that the Irish government sought to use the Sunningdale Agreements proposed Council of Ireland as a means of securing future Irish unity. It also examines the socio-economic problems which Northern Ireland faced at this time, and the attempts of the regions politicians to solve them, demonstrating the remarkable similarities between nationalist and unionist parties with regard to non-constitutional matters. It also challenges the view that the power-sharing experiment can be seen as a lost peace process, due to the levels of violence between 1972 and 1975. However, it demonstrates that the Sunningdale package, and the policies established during this period, provided the basic template for the current settlement in the region. It will thus be essential reading for students and scholars of modern British and Irish politics and the Northern Ireland conflict, and those interested in the politics of conflict resolution.

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Table of Contents
Template for peace
Northern Ireland 197275
Shaun McDaid
MANCHESTER UNIVERSITY PRESS
Manchester and New York
distributed in the United States exclusively by Palgrave Macmillan
Copyright Shaun McDaid 2013
The right of Shaun McDaid to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
Published by Manchester University Press
Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9NR, UK
and Room 400, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010, USA
www.manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk
Distributed in the United States exclusively by
Palgrave Macmillan, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York,
NY 10010, USA
Distributed in Canada exclusively by
UBC Press, University of British Columbia, 2029 West Mall,
Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z2
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data applied for
ISBN978 0 7190 8696 0
First published 2013
The publisher has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of URLs for any external or third-party internet websites referred to in this book, and does not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate.
Typeset
by Toppan Best-set Premedia Limited
For John and Mary
Acknowledgements
This book began life as a PhD dissertation. I am most grateful to my supervisor, Fearghal McGarry, for his sound advice and encouragement; and to Andrew R. Holmes, my co-supervisor, for the same reasons. Both have provided much-appreciated support. Thanks also to Sabine Wichert, who supervised my dissertation in first year, for her valuable input.
Thanks to staff from the Queen's University Belfast School of History and Anthropology for their encouragement including: David Hayton, Mary O'Dowd, Catherine Clinton, Paul Corthorn and Peter Gray. Thanks to Alvin Jackson, my thesis examiner, for his constructive criticisms, and ongoing support. I also thank Paul Bew, my internal examiner, for his valuable comments and suggestions. I also benefited from discussions with members of the Irish Politics Research Cluster at the Queen's University Belfast School of Politics, International Studies and Philosophy.
I am grateful to the following friends and colleagues who read draft chapters, making helpful comments and criticisms: Jessie Blackbourn, Josephine Doody, Stuart Aveyard and James Greer. Elaine Farrell read all of it, in various incarnations, and I am grateful for her support over the years. I am also grateful to Kacper Rekawek for many years of support, advice and ongoing collaboration. The usual disclaimer applies.
For lively discussions about history and politics while completing the book, my thanks also to Sean Farrell, Gareth Mulvenna, Conor Browne, Marisa McGlinchey, Iosif Kovras and Neophytos Loizides. I must also mention my former office mates Raoul McLaughlin, Chris McCoubrey, Chris Loughlin, Aidan Enright, Matthew Lewis and Erica Doherty.
My thanks to everyone at Manchester University Press for all their work, assistance, and for showing faith in the project.
Many thanks to the staff at all the archives and libraries (listed in the bibliography) where I have researched in particular Ross Moore at the Linen Hall Library. Thanks to colleagues at the Queen's University Belfast Institute of Governance for welcoming me there: Gemma N Chaoimh, Siobhn McAllister, Marie Lynch and especially to Phil Scraton for his support and encouragement.
Potential breach of my word limit prevents my mentioning everyone whose company I enjoyed during the writing of this book. Friends and colleagues from the past and present cohort of the Queen's University Belfast School of History and Anthropology, School of Politics, International Studies and Philosophy, and staff and students from the School of History and Archives, University College Dublin, all played their part not to mention those from the Sonic Arts Research Centre, Guthrie House and the B-Siders. You know who you are.
I must also name Vasileios Chatziioannou, Orestis Karamanlis, James Williams, Jose Argudo, Tej Pochiraju and Matthias Euler, who have all helped in various ways.
Thanks to all my friends and family in Donegal and further afield. Special thanks must, of course, go to my parents, John McDaid and Mary McDaid for all they have done for me; especially to Mary who proof-read the manuscript. And to Ania, for all her love, support and good humour throughout the writing process.
Shaun McDaid,
Belfast, December 2011
Abbreviations
AG
Attorney General
ASU
Active Service Unit
CBI
Confederation of British Industry
CENT
Central Secretariat (files)
CESA
Catholic Ex-Servicemen's Association
CJ4
Northern Ireland Office files
CLF
Commander of Land Forces
DEFE
Ministry of Defence (files)
DFA
Department of Foreign Affairs
DHSS
Department of Health and Social Services, Northern Ireland
DM
Deutsche Mark
DT
Department of the Taoiseach
DUP
Democratic Unionist Party
ECHR
European Court of Human Rights
ECR
European Conservative and Reformist (Group)
EEC
European Economic Community
EPP
European People's Party
ESB
Electricity Supply Board
EXMEMO
Executive Memorandum
FCO
Foreign and Commonwealth Office
FIN
Department of Finance (files)
FPCU
Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster
FRG
Federal Republic of Germany
GFA
Good Friday Agreement
HC
House of Commons
HMG
Her Majesty's Government
HQNI
Headquarters, Northern Ireland (British Army)
IDU
Inter Departmental Unit (on Northern Ireland)
ILP
Irish Labour Party
INLA
Irish National Liberation Army
IRA
Irish Republican Army
JUS
Department of Justice, Republic of Ireland
LAW
Loyalist Association of Workers
LEC
Law Enforcement Commission
MEP
Member of the European Parliament
MOD
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