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Full Description
Constitutional order across the islands of Britain and Ireland faces critical challenges with the rise of Scottish, Welsh and Irish nationalism, an emerging English consciousness, and Brexit. There is no resolution within the old assumptions about nations, states, sovereignty and borders. Nor can we rely on post-devolution practices in relations among the various governments based on bilateral relations between London and Dublin, Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast. Instead, Political Change across Britain and Ireland examines the whole web of what has been called the totality of relationships among the peoples of these islands, asking difficult questions about identities, institutions and prospects for the future.
Contents
1. Introduction. Rethinking 'These Islands'
Michael Keating
Part I. Identities
2. A Tale of Two Islands: Exploring National Identity Processes in Scotland and Ireland.
David McCrone and Jennifer Todd
3. Civic Politics and Constitutional Change in Ireland
Cera Murtagh and Mary C Murphy
4. Constitutional Quandaries through a Gendered Lens: Identities,
Institutions and Futures in Northern Ireland and Scotland
Clare Rice and Meryl Kenny
Part II. Institutions
5. Territorial cohesion and fragmentation after Brexit: Devolution and the Unions
Nicola McEwen and Lisa Claire Whitten
6. Navigating Multiple Party Systems across the UK and Ireland: The Conservative Party and Sinn Féin
Jonathan Evershed and Joanne McEvoy
7. The Spatial Framing of Wales-Ireland Relations: Cooperation, Sovereignty and Peripherality
Giada Lagana, Daniel Wincott and Gregory Davies
Part III. Futures
8. Northern Ireland after Brexit: Beyond Zero-Sum Constitutional Futures
C. R. G. Murray and Etain Tannam
9. Independence and Unity: Constitutional Futures on These Islands
Coree Brown Swan and John Doyle
10. Unionism and the Future of the UK's Union
John Denham, Paul Gillespie and Michael Keating
11. Conclusion. Political Change Across Britain and Ireland
John Coakley, Paul Gillespie and Nicola McEwen