The Troubles: Ireland's Ordeal and the Search for PeacePalgrave Macmillan, 5 sty 2002 - 624 Tim Pat Coogan covers the tortured history of Ireland from the beginning of the civil rights movement of the 1960s, through the long years of violence, up to the present attempts to find peace. His access to many of the principals gives this book a particular authority. Going beyond the slogans and headlines, Coogan provides a hard look at the deadly drama of a divided Ireland. |
Spis treści
Bicycling to Busby | 30 |
Marching Feet and Angry Voices | 70 |
Letting Slip the Dogs of War | 96 |
A Job for the Army | 134 |
They shot well didnt they | 157 |
Playing the Orange Card | 191 |
Activity without Movement | 211 |
Law and Disorder | 225 |
Legal Weaponry | 285 |
The Media War | 348 |
How the Peace was Made and Threatened | 385 |
Epilogue | 482 |
521 | |
List of Organisations | 543 |
Bibliography | 561 |
The Greening of the IRA | 242 |
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
The Troubles: Ireland's Ordeal 1966-1996 and the Search for Peace Tim Pat Coogan Widok fragmentu - 1996 |
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
Albert Reynolds amongst Anglo-Irish Anglo-Irish Agreement Armagh attempt August B-Specials became Belfast bomb Brian Faulkner British Government Bruton Callaghan campaign Catholic ceasefire civil rights Clinton Clonard Coogan Council de-commissioning death Declaration Derry Devlin Dick Spring Dublin election fact Faulkner Fianna Fail Fitt Gerry Adams Gerry Fitt Haughey Home House hunger strike Ibid INLA internment interview involved IRA's Irish Government Irish-American issue jail John Hume John Major killed Labour later leader London Loyalist Loyalist paramilitaries March Martin McGuinness meeting Michael movement murder Nationalist negotiations Northern Ireland O'Dowd O'Neill October operations organisation Paisley Paisley's peace process political Press Prime Minister prisoners programme Protestant Provisional IRA Republic Republican rioting SDLP Secretary security forces shooting shot Sinn Fein situation Six Counties soldiers Stormont talks Taoiseach terrorist Thatcher Ulster Unionist Party violence vote Westminster Whitelaw