The Oxford Handbook of Irish Politics
Herausgeber: Farrell, David M; Hardiman, Niamh
The Oxford Handbook of Irish Politics
Herausgeber: Farrell, David M; Hardiman, Niamh
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This andbook provides the most comprehensive coverage of Irish politics and society to date, and is the go-to resource for academics, students, policy-makers, and journalists.
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This andbook provides the most comprehensive coverage of Irish politics and society to date, and is the go-to resource for academics, students, policy-makers, and journalists.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 792
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. November 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 259mm x 180mm x 51mm
- Gewicht: 1497g
- ISBN-13: 9780198823834
- ISBN-10: 0198823835
- Artikelnr.: 61414409
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 792
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. November 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 259mm x 180mm x 51mm
- Gewicht: 1497g
- ISBN-13: 9780198823834
- ISBN-10: 0198823835
- Artikelnr.: 61414409
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
David M. Farrell is Head of Politics and International Relations at University College Dublin. He specialises in the studies of representation, elections, and parties, and recent publications include Reimagining Democracy: Lessons in Deliberative Democracy from the Irish Front Line (co-authored with Jane Suiter, Cornell University Press, 2019), and A Conservative Revolution? (co-edited with Michael Marsh, and Gail McElroy, OUP, 2017). His current work is focused on constitutional deliberation. To date he has advised and/or researched five government-led deliberative mini-public processes (citizens' assemblies) in Ireland and the UK. Niamh Hardiman teaches at UCD School of Politics and International Relations. She is the Director of the UCD Public Policy programme, and a Research Fellow at UCD Geary Institute for Public Policy. Her research interests focus on the implications of developmental pathways for state capacity, policy choices, and economic performance. She has published extensively on the evolution of the Irish state, on the comparative politics of the financial crisis and its aftermath, and on the political economy of the European periphery.
* 1: Niamh Hardiman, David M. Farrell, Eoin Carolan, John Coakley,
Aidan Regan, Colin Scott, Ben Tonra and Alexa Zellentin: What kind of
Ireland?
* Section 1: Rights, citizenship and democratic politics
* 2: Iseult Honohan: Republicanism and Public Affairs
* 3: Thomas Murray: Economic and Social Rights in Ireland
* 4: Yvonne Galligan: Gender Equality Politics
* 5: Alexa Zellentin: Education for Citizenship in a Changing Country
* 6: Peter Stone: Democracy in Ireland: Theory and Practice
* Section 2: International Context
* 7: Paul Gillespie: The Irish-British Dimension
* 8: Brigid Laffan: Ireland in a European Context
* 9: John O'Brennan: Ireland and European Governance
* 10: Ben Tonra: Foreign, Security, and Defence Policy
* 11: Patrick Paul Walsh and Ciara Whelan: The Changing Nature of Irish
International Development Policy
* 12: Melanie Hoewer: Human Rights and Gender
* Section 3: The Constitution and Justice System
* 13: Tom Hickey: Judges and the Political Organs of State
* 14: Eoin Carolan: The Constitution, Politics, and Public Policy
* 15: Ian O'Donnell: Penal Culture in Ireland
* 16: Paul Daly: The Irish Courts and the Administrative State
* 17: Maria Cahill: Ambivalent Self-Determination: Freedom From and
Deference to Foreign Laws
* Section 4: The Institutional Framework
* 18: R. Kenneth Carty: The Electoral Framework and the Politics of
Representation
* 19: Muiris MacCarthaigh: Parliamentary Accountability and Reform
* 20: Mary C. Murphy: Bicameralism in a Unitary State
* 21: Shane Martin: The Political Executive
* 22: John Coakley: The Politics of the Presidency
* 23: Theresa Reidy: Form Over Function: The Strange Paradox of Local
Government
* Section 5: The Political Economy of Growth
* 24: Sam Brazys and Aidan Regan: Small States in Global Markets: The
Political Economy of FDI-led Growth in Ireland
* 25: Micheál L. Collins and Mary P. Murphy: The Political Economy of
Work and Welfare
* 26: Stephen Kinsella and Aidan Regan: The Political Economy of Fiscal
Policy in Ireland
* 27: Micheál L. Collins and Aidan Regan: The Distribution of Income
and Wealth in Ireland
* 28: Patrick Gallagher, Seán Ó Riain, Fergal Rhatigan, Michael Byrne:
The Politics of Banking in Ireland
* 29: Michelle Norris and Michael Byrne: The Political Economy of
Housing in Ireland
* Section 6: Political Behaviour
* 30: Conor Little and David M. Farrell: The Party System: At a
Critical Juncture
* 31: Liam Weeks: Independents and the Party System
* 32: Michael Marsh: The (Un)Changing Irish Voter
* 33: Fiona Buckley and Mary Brennan: Gender Quotas in Ireland: A First
for Proportional Representation by the Single Transferable Vote
* 34: Jane Suiter and Roderick Flynn: Irish Media and the Shaping of
Political Discourse
* 35: Michael Gallagher: The Politics of Referendums
* 36: David M. Farrell, Jane Suiter, Clodagh Harris, and Kevin
Cunningham: Ireland's Deliberative Mini-Publics
* Section 7: The Politics of Regulation and Accountability
* 37: Colin Scott: The Politics of Regulation in Ireland
* 38: Gary Murphy: Open Government
* 39: Blanaid Clarke: The Role of the Central Bank of Ireland as an
Independent Financial Regulator
* 40: . J. McIntyre: Regulating the Information Society: Data
Protection and Ireland's Internet Industry
* 41: Vicky Conway: The Politics of Police Accountability
Aidan Regan, Colin Scott, Ben Tonra and Alexa Zellentin: What kind of
Ireland?
* Section 1: Rights, citizenship and democratic politics
* 2: Iseult Honohan: Republicanism and Public Affairs
* 3: Thomas Murray: Economic and Social Rights in Ireland
* 4: Yvonne Galligan: Gender Equality Politics
* 5: Alexa Zellentin: Education for Citizenship in a Changing Country
* 6: Peter Stone: Democracy in Ireland: Theory and Practice
* Section 2: International Context
* 7: Paul Gillespie: The Irish-British Dimension
* 8: Brigid Laffan: Ireland in a European Context
* 9: John O'Brennan: Ireland and European Governance
* 10: Ben Tonra: Foreign, Security, and Defence Policy
* 11: Patrick Paul Walsh and Ciara Whelan: The Changing Nature of Irish
International Development Policy
* 12: Melanie Hoewer: Human Rights and Gender
* Section 3: The Constitution and Justice System
* 13: Tom Hickey: Judges and the Political Organs of State
* 14: Eoin Carolan: The Constitution, Politics, and Public Policy
* 15: Ian O'Donnell: Penal Culture in Ireland
* 16: Paul Daly: The Irish Courts and the Administrative State
* 17: Maria Cahill: Ambivalent Self-Determination: Freedom From and
Deference to Foreign Laws
* Section 4: The Institutional Framework
* 18: R. Kenneth Carty: The Electoral Framework and the Politics of
Representation
* 19: Muiris MacCarthaigh: Parliamentary Accountability and Reform
* 20: Mary C. Murphy: Bicameralism in a Unitary State
* 21: Shane Martin: The Political Executive
* 22: John Coakley: The Politics of the Presidency
* 23: Theresa Reidy: Form Over Function: The Strange Paradox of Local
Government
* Section 5: The Political Economy of Growth
* 24: Sam Brazys and Aidan Regan: Small States in Global Markets: The
Political Economy of FDI-led Growth in Ireland
* 25: Micheál L. Collins and Mary P. Murphy: The Political Economy of
Work and Welfare
* 26: Stephen Kinsella and Aidan Regan: The Political Economy of Fiscal
Policy in Ireland
* 27: Micheál L. Collins and Aidan Regan: The Distribution of Income
and Wealth in Ireland
* 28: Patrick Gallagher, Seán Ó Riain, Fergal Rhatigan, Michael Byrne:
The Politics of Banking in Ireland
* 29: Michelle Norris and Michael Byrne: The Political Economy of
Housing in Ireland
* Section 6: Political Behaviour
* 30: Conor Little and David M. Farrell: The Party System: At a
Critical Juncture
* 31: Liam Weeks: Independents and the Party System
* 32: Michael Marsh: The (Un)Changing Irish Voter
* 33: Fiona Buckley and Mary Brennan: Gender Quotas in Ireland: A First
for Proportional Representation by the Single Transferable Vote
* 34: Jane Suiter and Roderick Flynn: Irish Media and the Shaping of
Political Discourse
* 35: Michael Gallagher: The Politics of Referendums
* 36: David M. Farrell, Jane Suiter, Clodagh Harris, and Kevin
Cunningham: Ireland's Deliberative Mini-Publics
* Section 7: The Politics of Regulation and Accountability
* 37: Colin Scott: The Politics of Regulation in Ireland
* 38: Gary Murphy: Open Government
* 39: Blanaid Clarke: The Role of the Central Bank of Ireland as an
Independent Financial Regulator
* 40: . J. McIntyre: Regulating the Information Society: Data
Protection and Ireland's Internet Industry
* 41: Vicky Conway: The Politics of Police Accountability
* 1: Niamh Hardiman, David M. Farrell, Eoin Carolan, John Coakley,
Aidan Regan, Colin Scott, Ben Tonra and Alexa Zellentin: What kind of
Ireland?
* Section 1: Rights, citizenship and democratic politics
* 2: Iseult Honohan: Republicanism and Public Affairs
* 3: Thomas Murray: Economic and Social Rights in Ireland
* 4: Yvonne Galligan: Gender Equality Politics
* 5: Alexa Zellentin: Education for Citizenship in a Changing Country
* 6: Peter Stone: Democracy in Ireland: Theory and Practice
* Section 2: International Context
* 7: Paul Gillespie: The Irish-British Dimension
* 8: Brigid Laffan: Ireland in a European Context
* 9: John O'Brennan: Ireland and European Governance
* 10: Ben Tonra: Foreign, Security, and Defence Policy
* 11: Patrick Paul Walsh and Ciara Whelan: The Changing Nature of Irish
International Development Policy
* 12: Melanie Hoewer: Human Rights and Gender
* Section 3: The Constitution and Justice System
* 13: Tom Hickey: Judges and the Political Organs of State
* 14: Eoin Carolan: The Constitution, Politics, and Public Policy
* 15: Ian O'Donnell: Penal Culture in Ireland
* 16: Paul Daly: The Irish Courts and the Administrative State
* 17: Maria Cahill: Ambivalent Self-Determination: Freedom From and
Deference to Foreign Laws
* Section 4: The Institutional Framework
* 18: R. Kenneth Carty: The Electoral Framework and the Politics of
Representation
* 19: Muiris MacCarthaigh: Parliamentary Accountability and Reform
* 20: Mary C. Murphy: Bicameralism in a Unitary State
* 21: Shane Martin: The Political Executive
* 22: John Coakley: The Politics of the Presidency
* 23: Theresa Reidy: Form Over Function: The Strange Paradox of Local
Government
* Section 5: The Political Economy of Growth
* 24: Sam Brazys and Aidan Regan: Small States in Global Markets: The
Political Economy of FDI-led Growth in Ireland
* 25: Micheál L. Collins and Mary P. Murphy: The Political Economy of
Work and Welfare
* 26: Stephen Kinsella and Aidan Regan: The Political Economy of Fiscal
Policy in Ireland
* 27: Micheál L. Collins and Aidan Regan: The Distribution of Income
and Wealth in Ireland
* 28: Patrick Gallagher, Seán Ó Riain, Fergal Rhatigan, Michael Byrne:
The Politics of Banking in Ireland
* 29: Michelle Norris and Michael Byrne: The Political Economy of
Housing in Ireland
* Section 6: Political Behaviour
* 30: Conor Little and David M. Farrell: The Party System: At a
Critical Juncture
* 31: Liam Weeks: Independents and the Party System
* 32: Michael Marsh: The (Un)Changing Irish Voter
* 33: Fiona Buckley and Mary Brennan: Gender Quotas in Ireland: A First
for Proportional Representation by the Single Transferable Vote
* 34: Jane Suiter and Roderick Flynn: Irish Media and the Shaping of
Political Discourse
* 35: Michael Gallagher: The Politics of Referendums
* 36: David M. Farrell, Jane Suiter, Clodagh Harris, and Kevin
Cunningham: Ireland's Deliberative Mini-Publics
* Section 7: The Politics of Regulation and Accountability
* 37: Colin Scott: The Politics of Regulation in Ireland
* 38: Gary Murphy: Open Government
* 39: Blanaid Clarke: The Role of the Central Bank of Ireland as an
Independent Financial Regulator
* 40: . J. McIntyre: Regulating the Information Society: Data
Protection and Ireland's Internet Industry
* 41: Vicky Conway: The Politics of Police Accountability
Aidan Regan, Colin Scott, Ben Tonra and Alexa Zellentin: What kind of
Ireland?
* Section 1: Rights, citizenship and democratic politics
* 2: Iseult Honohan: Republicanism and Public Affairs
* 3: Thomas Murray: Economic and Social Rights in Ireland
* 4: Yvonne Galligan: Gender Equality Politics
* 5: Alexa Zellentin: Education for Citizenship in a Changing Country
* 6: Peter Stone: Democracy in Ireland: Theory and Practice
* Section 2: International Context
* 7: Paul Gillespie: The Irish-British Dimension
* 8: Brigid Laffan: Ireland in a European Context
* 9: John O'Brennan: Ireland and European Governance
* 10: Ben Tonra: Foreign, Security, and Defence Policy
* 11: Patrick Paul Walsh and Ciara Whelan: The Changing Nature of Irish
International Development Policy
* 12: Melanie Hoewer: Human Rights and Gender
* Section 3: The Constitution and Justice System
* 13: Tom Hickey: Judges and the Political Organs of State
* 14: Eoin Carolan: The Constitution, Politics, and Public Policy
* 15: Ian O'Donnell: Penal Culture in Ireland
* 16: Paul Daly: The Irish Courts and the Administrative State
* 17: Maria Cahill: Ambivalent Self-Determination: Freedom From and
Deference to Foreign Laws
* Section 4: The Institutional Framework
* 18: R. Kenneth Carty: The Electoral Framework and the Politics of
Representation
* 19: Muiris MacCarthaigh: Parliamentary Accountability and Reform
* 20: Mary C. Murphy: Bicameralism in a Unitary State
* 21: Shane Martin: The Political Executive
* 22: John Coakley: The Politics of the Presidency
* 23: Theresa Reidy: Form Over Function: The Strange Paradox of Local
Government
* Section 5: The Political Economy of Growth
* 24: Sam Brazys and Aidan Regan: Small States in Global Markets: The
Political Economy of FDI-led Growth in Ireland
* 25: Micheál L. Collins and Mary P. Murphy: The Political Economy of
Work and Welfare
* 26: Stephen Kinsella and Aidan Regan: The Political Economy of Fiscal
Policy in Ireland
* 27: Micheál L. Collins and Aidan Regan: The Distribution of Income
and Wealth in Ireland
* 28: Patrick Gallagher, Seán Ó Riain, Fergal Rhatigan, Michael Byrne:
The Politics of Banking in Ireland
* 29: Michelle Norris and Michael Byrne: The Political Economy of
Housing in Ireland
* Section 6: Political Behaviour
* 30: Conor Little and David M. Farrell: The Party System: At a
Critical Juncture
* 31: Liam Weeks: Independents and the Party System
* 32: Michael Marsh: The (Un)Changing Irish Voter
* 33: Fiona Buckley and Mary Brennan: Gender Quotas in Ireland: A First
for Proportional Representation by the Single Transferable Vote
* 34: Jane Suiter and Roderick Flynn: Irish Media and the Shaping of
Political Discourse
* 35: Michael Gallagher: The Politics of Referendums
* 36: David M. Farrell, Jane Suiter, Clodagh Harris, and Kevin
Cunningham: Ireland's Deliberative Mini-Publics
* Section 7: The Politics of Regulation and Accountability
* 37: Colin Scott: The Politics of Regulation in Ireland
* 38: Gary Murphy: Open Government
* 39: Blanaid Clarke: The Role of the Central Bank of Ireland as an
Independent Financial Regulator
* 40: . J. McIntyre: Regulating the Information Society: Data
Protection and Ireland's Internet Industry
* 41: Vicky Conway: The Politics of Police Accountability