Democracy and dissent in the Irish Free State
Opposition, decolonisation, and majority rights
- 296 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Democracy and dissent in the Irish Free State
Opposition, decolonisation, and majority rights
About This Book
A new analysis of the difficulties in normalising opposition in the Irish Free State, this book analyses the collision between nineteenth-century monolithic nationalist movements with the norms and expectations of multiparty parliamentary democracy. The Irish revolutionaries' attempts to create a Gaelic, postcolonial state involved resolving tension between these two ideas. Smaller economically-driven parties such as the Labour and Farmers' parties attempted to move on from the revolution's unnatural focus on nationalist political issues while the larger revolutionary parties descended from Sinn FĂ©in attempt to recreate or restore notions of revolutionary unity. This conflict made democracy and opposition hard to establish in the Irish Free State.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Democracy, historians, and the civil war
- 2 Opposition and revolution
- 3 Decolonising the state
- 4 Making politics normal
- 5 A slightly constitutional opposition
- 6 Cults of little personality
- Coda: multiparty democracy in the Irish Free State
- Bibliography
- Index