ABSTRACT

This book examines the role of local peacebuilders in Northern Ireland and some of the challenges they face.

The work explores the perspective and experiences of local peacebuilders in Northern Ireland and the border counties of the Republic of Ireland about their analysis and critique of liberal peacebuilding, their hopes, and concerns, and how they are aligned with external funders. It features interviews with a plethora of civil society organization workers, funding agency community development officers, and civil servants adjudicating the International Fund for Ireland and the European Union Peace and Rconciliation Fund, which highlight the participants’ local wisdom, practices, and values regarding creating sustainable livelihoods, peacebuilding insights, receiving recognition for their work, dissonance with internal and external actors, conflict transformation efforts, and and engagement with partners and allies. The rich empirical qualitative exploratory case study, situated in post-peace accord Northern Ireland and the border counties of the Republic of Ireland, speaks to the respondents’ ideas about the creation, delivery, and efficacy of peacebuilding-funded initiatives as well as their hopes and dreams for the future. In exploring this central argument, the work offers an overarching structure in which to analyze the theory and praxis of conflict and peacebuilding in Northern Ireland. More generally, it offers an important contribution to our understanding of local peacebuilders, and how economic assistance impacts on a divided society.

This book will be of much interest to students of peacebuilding, conflict resolution, sociology, and British and Irish politics.

chapter 1|14 pages

Local Experts' Wisdom, and Practices

chapter 3|21 pages

Your Work Is Done, or Your Work Is Not Done

Let the Past Wither on the Vine

chapter 4|22 pages

We All Eat the Same Potatoes

chapter 5|22 pages

“Apathy is Frozen by Words” 1

chapter 6|23 pages

Yeast Is to Bread What Economic Aid Is to Peace

The Peace-by-Prosperity Model

chapter 7|22 pages

Better to Have a Peace Industry Than a War Industry

You Can't Eat a Flag

chapter 9|15 pages

Economic Aid and Peacebuilding in Northern Ireland

Critical Peacebuilding Emancipated?