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Full Description
Inequality, Identity, and the Politics of Northern Ireland examines how the politics of threat and resentment, undergirded by persistent poverty and class and gender inequalities across Catholic and Protestant communities, shape dynamics of political conflict, while simultaneously giving way to critical subjectivities at the community level through which more transformative visions of "peace" may emerge.
Contents
Chapter 1: A Tale of Two Belfasts? Inequality, Segregation, and the Politics of Identity in a "Post-conflict" City
Chapter 2: Social Immobility, Ethnopolitics, and the "Culture Wars": Contextualizing Violence and Disorder in Belfast, 2008-2014
Chapter 3: Post-conflict Masculinities, Exclusion, and Contradictions in Ex-combatant Community-based Peacebuilding
Chapter 4: Identity, the Politics of Policing, and Limits to Legitimacy
Chapter 5: Brexit: A Constitutional Moment in Unionism?
Chapter 6: "Peace Fatigue," Power Sharing, and Political Impediments to Community-based Peacebuilding