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Full Description
Ireland, both north and south, is peripheral to the economies of Western Europe. The ability of Ireland to compete with new modes of industrial organisation is hampered by the underdeveloped and unevenly developed resources of the region. This book offers an insight into the limitations of contemporary development policies in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, as well as offering an all-Ireland critique of Irish society and its structural limitations. The impact of the Single European Market and the continued peripheralisation of both economies within Europe supports the inclusive framework promoted within the collection, which argues for an essential rethink of contemporary policymaking throughout Ireland. This volume should provide an insight into the inadequacy of conventional and orthodox approaches to Ireland's economic problems.
Contents
Contemporary development issues in Ireland, Peter Shirlow; uneven development and Irish peripheralization, Prionnsias Breathnach; peripherality and the political economy of Northern Ireland, Douglas Hamilton; euroregionalism - national conflict and development, James Anderson and James Goodman; EC structural funds and economic development in the Republic of Ireland, James Walsh; economic development - a trade union response, Paul Sweeney; industrial collapse and post-Fordist over determination of Belfast, Andreas Cebulla and Jim Smyth; (in)dependence, development and the colonial legacy in contemporary Irish identity, Liam Greenslade; development discourses - conservative, radical and beyond, Ronnie Munck and Honor Fagan.