25 episodes

Leading academics explore the causes and consequences of the Partition of Ireland in a series of authored talks, developed by Queen’s University Belfast with support from the BBC.

QUB Talks 100 – The Partition of Ireland: Causes and Consequences BBC Radio Ulster

    • History

Leading academics explore the causes and consequences of the Partition of Ireland in a series of authored talks, developed by Queen’s University Belfast with support from the BBC.

    Dr Robert Lynch - Partition and the Anglo-Irish Treaty

    Dr Robert Lynch - Partition and the Anglo-Irish Treaty

    Contributor:
    Dr Robert Lynch
    Talk Title
    Partition and the Anglo-Irish Treaty
    Talk Synopsis:
    This talk explores the background to the Anglo-Irish Treaty and its immediate (and lasting) effects. It suggests that ‘the most extreme paranoias of the Unionist psyche’ were reinforced by the events of the post-Treaty period, including as a result of growing unionist mistrust of the British government. And it explores how the Boundary Commission allowed ‘both sides to place radically different interpretations on the shape of any future settlement.’ It also looks at Sinn Féin’s attitude towards/understanding of unionist concerns and the extent to which these may have been predicated on a sense of unionism as ‘somehow inauthentic… and that conflict in Ireland was due fundamentally to the British presence’ rather than the ‘reality that there were almost one million people in Ulster who wanted nothing to do with their nationalist project.’ And it concludes by suggesting that ‘Ulster’s experience in 1922’ shaped the ‘rather draconian defensiveness’ of the Unionist government which emerged in its aftermath as well as creating disunity within the ‘northern Catholic minority’ and between northern and southern nationalists.
    Short biography:
    Dr Robert Lynch, University of Glasgow
    Further Reading:
    A State Under Siege. The Establishment of Northern Ireland 1920-1926 – Brian Follis
    Partition and the Limits of Irish Nationalism – Clare O'Halloran
    The Northern IRA and the early years of partition, 1920-22 – Robert Lynch
    The Partition of Ireland, 1912-1925 (Cambridge, 2019) – Robert Lynch
    Northern Nationalism. Nationalist Politics, Partition and the Catholic Minority in Northern Ireland 1890-1940 - Eamon Phoenix

    • 23 min
    Professor Robert Savage - Broadcasting and the Border: How partition influenced broadcasting on the island of Ireland

    Professor Robert Savage - Broadcasting and the Border: How partition influenced broadcasting on the island of Ireland

    Contributor:
    Professor Robert Savage
    Talk Title
    Broadcasting and the Border: How partition influenced broadcasting on the island of Ireland
    Talk Synopsis:
    This talk explores the development of broadcasting in Ireland during the 1920s and how the new radio stations in Belfast and Dublin were affected (and constrained) by politics. It describes the growing popularity and influence of broadcast services and the impact of new technologies, competition and wider social changes on the work of programme-makers in the BBC and RTÉ. It reflects critically on aspects of editorial decision-making and output by both broadcasters, but suggests that despite ‘all of [their] inevitable failures and shortcomings, ‘independent public service media’ remain ‘an indispensable component of any truly democratic society.’
    Short biography:
    Professor Robert Savage is the Director of the Boston College Irish Studies Program and a member of the university’s History Department faculty.
    Further Reading:
    The BBC's Irish Troubles, Television, Conflict and Northern Ireland – Robert Savage
    A Loss of Innocence? television and Irish Society 1960-1972 – Robert Savage
    Broadcasting and Public Life, RTÉ News and Current Affairs 1926-1997 – John Horgan:
    Luck and the Irish, A Brief History of Change from 1970 – Roy Foster
    A Post-Nationalist History of Television in Ireland – Edward Brennan
    2RN and the Origins of Irish Radio – Richard Pine

    • 22 min
    Professor Bill Kissane - The Partition of Ireland in a Global Context

    Professor Bill Kissane - The Partition of Ireland in a Global Context

    Contributor:
    Professor Bill Kissane
    Talk Title:
    The Partition of Ireland in a Global Context
    Talk Synopsis:
    This talk explores partition in an international context and also the similarities and differences between what happened in Ireland and elsewhere, including Cyprus, India and Palestine. It suggests that most partitions are ‘provisional’ because they ‘fail to resolve conflicts’ and looks at ‘the identity shifts that occur when borders change’ and what these meant (and mean) in an Irish context. It looks at how majority rule ‘polarised rather than reconciled’ communities in Northern Ireland and the way in which Partition led to ‘consolidation and identity formation based on religion’ in the decades that followed. And it concludes by considering what the experience and effect of partition might mean for future attempts to resolve deep-seated territorial  conflicts.
    Short biography:
    Bill Kissane is a Reader in Politics at the London School of Economics.
    Further Reading:
    Literature, Partition and the Nation State – Joe Cleary
    'Ethnic Conflict and the Two State Solution: the Irish Experience of Partition'. Mapping Frontiers, Plotting Pathways, Ancilliary Paper, No.3, 2004. Institute of British Studies. Queens University Belfast – John Coakley
    'Shackles Across the Heart: Comparing Ireland's Partition', A Treatise on Northern Ireland Vol 1, pp.370-397 – Brendan O'Leary
    Partitions and the Sisyphean Making of Peoples – Dirk Moses.
    Partition in Ireland, India, and Palestine: Theory and Practice – T. G. Fraser

    • 19 min
    Professor Richard Bourke - Unionisms and Partition

    Professor Richard Bourke - Unionisms and Partition

    Contributor:
    Professor Richard Bourke
    Talk Title:
    Unionisms and Partition
    Talk Synopsis:
    This talk explores the background to the Government of Ireland Act (1920) and how it was ‘a departure from unionism in its original, “classic” sense’. It describes how the creation of a ‘parliamentary federation’ was ‘a setup which unionist statecraft had been determined to avoid’ and how it ‘envisaged the creation of yet another union: an Irish union’ which would be facilitated by the formation of a Council of Ireland. It suggests that UK government policy in the early 1920s ‘was neither unionist nor partitionist in complexion’ – something that was reflected in the terms of the Anglo-Irish Treaty which ‘prospectively incorporated’ Northern Ireland into the Irish Free State. It also looks at differing views of partition as either ‘undemocratic’ or ‘a matter of democratic right’ and the effect of subsequent political developments. And it looks to how Ulster unionism might think about its future and constitutional relations – ‘pursuing a lasting settlement instead of protesting as its future is shaped behind its back’.
    Short biography:
    Richard Bourke is Professor of the History of Political Thought, and a Fellow of King’s College, at the University of Cambridge.
    Further Reading:
    A Fool’s Paradise: Being a Constitutionalist’s Criticism of the Home Rule Bill of 1912 – A. V. Dicey
    Ulster’s Stand for Union - Ronald McNeill,
    Home Rule: An Irish History, 1800–2000 – Alvin Jackson
    Peace in Ireland: The War of Ideas – Richard Bourke
    “Genealogies of Partition: History, History-Writing and ‘the Troubles’ in Ireland,” Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, 9: 4 (December 2006), pp. 619–34 – Margaret O’Callaghan
    ‘Democracy, Sovereignty and Unionist Political Thought during the Revolutionary Period’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 27 (December 2017), pp. 211–32 – Colin Reid

    • 27 min
    Professor Brendan O'Leary - Partition in Comparative Perspective

    Professor Brendan O'Leary - Partition in Comparative Perspective

    Contributor:
    Professor Brendan O’Leary
    Talk Title
    Partition in Comparative Perspective
    Talk Synopsis:
    This talk places the Partition of Ireland in a comparative international context. It describes some of what was happening elsewhere in Europe at the same time and looks at the background and effects of the ‘two partitions in 1920: of Ireland and of Ulster.’ It notes that ‘few modern partitions have endured’ and explores the arguments that have been advanced for them and their application in different places, including Ireland. It suggests that conflict ‘in and over Northern Ireland over the last century may be correctly attributed both to partition itself and to the imperfection of the partition’. And it makes a case for how (in both general and specific terms) ‘partitions generate security dilemmas… pushing conflict downstream’, concluding that ‘prudence… mandates opposing partition in policymaking and placing the burden of proof on its advocates.’
    Short biography:
    Brendan O'Leary is the current Lauder Professor of Political Science at the University of Pennsylvania.
    Further Reading:
    A Treatise on Northern Ireland, (Vol 1, Chapter 7, and Vol 2, Chapters 1 and 2) – Brendan O’Leary,
    The Partition of Ireland, 1911-1925 – Michael Laffan
    The History of Partition, 1912-1925 – Denis Gwynn

    • 32 min
    Professor Fearghal McGarry - The Killing of Sir Henry Wilson: An Irish Tragedy

    Professor Fearghal McGarry - The Killing of Sir Henry Wilson: An Irish Tragedy

    Contributor:
    Professor Fearghal McGarry
    Talk Title:
    The Killing of Sir Henry Wilson: An Irish Tragedy
    Talk Synopsis:
    This talk explores the circumstances and impact of Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson’s murder on the doorstep of his Belgravia home in June, 1922. It describes his role in the politics of this period, including as chief security advisor to the new Northern Ireland government, and how his killers (two London-born republicans) had served in the British army during WW1. It suggests that the story of Sir Henry Wilson and his killers, including their views and sense of identity, illustrates the complex and interconnected nature of relationships ‘within and between’ Ireland and Britain – many of which are played out in people’s individual lives/family circumstances. And it concludes by suggesting that ‘an ethical remembering of this difficult history’ might usefully foreground ‘its complexities and contradictions and the cost of violence for those left behind… not least the narrowing of identities… which continues to challenge reconciliation in Ireland.’
    Biography:
    Fearghal McGarry is Professor of Modern Irish History at Queen’s University Belfast.
    Further Reading:
    Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson: A Political Soldier – Keith Jeffery
    ‘Michael Collins and the assassination of Sir Henry Wilson’, Irish Historical Studies, 28/110, pp 150-170 – Peter Hart
    Southern Irish Loyalism, 1912-49 – Brian Hughes and Conor Morrissey (eds)
    The Partition of Ireland, 1918-1925 – Robert Lynch
    The IRA in Britain, 1919-1923 – Gerard Noonan

    • 17 min

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