Contesting Politics
Women In Ireland, North And South
Westview Press Inc
1st Edition
Published on 12. November 1998
Book
Hardback
296 pages
978-0-8133-3416-5 (ISBN)
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Description
This book, for the first time anywhere, gathers the expertise of those researching women and politics in Irelandboth North and Southinto a single, comprehensive and accessible textbook on the topic. Contributors are drawn from both academic and activist arenas to bring a multi-disciplinary approach to the subject. Throughout, the book emphasizes analytical approaches to explaining the relationship between women and political activity in Ireland. In positing politics as a broadly defined activity that stretches well beyond the formal institutions of the political system, and in taking an all-Ireland approach, editors Yvonne Galligan, Eils Ward, and Rick Wilford bring new depth and texture to the topic. While the main analytical tools used are drawn from the discipline of political science, the text will be invaluable in Womens studies and Irish studies classrooms as well as within political science. }This book, for the first time anywhere, gathers the expertise of those researching women and politics in Irelandboth North and Southinto a single, comprehensive and accessible textbook on the topic.
Contributors are drawn from both academic and activist arenas to bring a multi-disciplinary approach to the subject. Contesting Politics begins by presenting current theoretical issues that inform much research on the topic. Contributions by historians locate the participation of women in aspects of Irish political life since the end of the nineteenth century, emphasizing the issues of suffragism and nationalism. The book then examines the central issues of women and the political parties and representation, the relationship between the womens movement and community-based womens groups in Ireland, and womens participation in public bodies and the Northern Ireland Womens Coalition; it then moves to policy matters such as women and economic development and the evolution of state feminism. A comparative North/South data section looks at the impact of the gender gap on specific policy issues. Also examined is the impact of the European Union on women.Throughout, the book emphasizes analytical approaches to explaining the relationship between women and political activity in Ireland.
In positing politics as a broadly defined activity that stretches well beyond the formal institutions of the political system, and in taking an all-Ireland approach, editors Yvonne Galligan, Eils Ward, and Rick Wilford bring new depth and texture to the topic. While the main analytical tools used are drawn from the discipline of political science, the text will be invaluable in Womens studies and Irish studies classrooms as well as within political science. }
Contributors are drawn from both academic and activist arenas to bring a multi-disciplinary approach to the subject. Contesting Politics begins by presenting current theoretical issues that inform much research on the topic. Contributions by historians locate the participation of women in aspects of Irish political life since the end of the nineteenth century, emphasizing the issues of suffragism and nationalism. The book then examines the central issues of women and the political parties and representation, the relationship between the womens movement and community-based womens groups in Ireland, and womens participation in public bodies and the Northern Ireland Womens Coalition; it then moves to policy matters such as women and economic development and the evolution of state feminism. A comparative North/South data section looks at the impact of the gender gap on specific policy issues. Also examined is the impact of the European Union on women.Throughout, the book emphasizes analytical approaches to explaining the relationship between women and political activity in Ireland.
In positing politics as a broadly defined activity that stretches well beyond the formal institutions of the political system, and in taking an all-Ireland approach, editors Yvonne Galligan, Eils Ward, and Rick Wilford bring new depth and texture to the topic. While the main analytical tools used are drawn from the discipline of political science, the text will be invaluable in Womens studies and Irish studies classrooms as well as within political science. }
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Inc
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-8133-3416-5 (9780813334165)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions
Book
11/1998
1st Edition
Westview Press Inc
€57.19
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Content
Introduction; Feminism, Politics, and Postmodernism (Carmel Roulston); Women and the Constitution of the Republic of Ireland (Alpha Connelly); The Impact of EU Equality Legislation on Irish Women (Frances Gardiner); State Feminism in Ireland (Evelyn Mahon and Valerie Morgan); The Republic of Irelands Equality Contract: Women and Public Policy (Eileen Connolly); Networks of Womens Groups in the Republic of Ireland (rla ODonovan and Els Ward ); Women Working for Peace in Northern Ireland (Bronagh Hinds); Womens Political Representation in Ireland (Yvonne Galligan and Rick Wilford); Gender and Party Politics in the Republic of Ireland (Yvonne Galligan and Rick Wilford); Gender and Party Politics in Northern Ireland (Rick Wilford and Yvonne Galligan); Women and Nominated Boards in Ireland (Deirdre Heenan and Anne Marie Gray); Shaping the Nation: Women in the Free State Parliament, 19231937 (Mary Clancy); Ulster Was Different? Women, Feminism, and Nationalism in the North of Ireland (Margaret Ward); Is There a Gender Gap in Political Attitudes in Ireland? (Freda Donoghue and Paula Devine)