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32 Counties

The Failure of Partition and the Case for a United Ireland

Kieran Allen

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Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Politikwissenschaft

Beschreibung

'This is Irish history seen anew, from below, bristling with practical lessons for working-class struggle today' - Eamonn McCann

The 32 counties of Ireland were divided through imperial terror and gerrymandering. Partition was borne from a Tory strategy to defend the British Empire and has spawned a ‘carnival of reaction’ in Irish politics ever since. Over the last 100 years, conservative forces have dominated both states offering religious identity as a diversion from economic failures and inequality.

Through a sharp analysis of the history of partition, Kieran Allen rejects the view that the 'two cultures' of Catholic and Protestant communities lock people into permanent antagonism. Instead, the sectarian states have kept its citizens divided through political and economic measures like austerity, competition for reduced services and low wages.

Overturning conventional narratives, 32 Counties evokes the tradition of James Connolly and calls for an Irish unity movement from below to unite the North and the Republic into a secular, socialist and united Ireland.

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Schlagwörter

the Belfast agreement, Irish Border, Carnival of Reaction, Edward Carson, Protestantism, Democratic Unionist party, The Troubles, Orange Order, Catholicism, Partition, James Connolly, Brexit, Good Friday Agreement, Unionists, Sinn Fein, Republic of Ireland, Sectarianism, Irish Unity, Irish Partition, House of Lords