Diverse Republic

£20.00

Diverse Republic

Cultural studies

Author: Bryan Fanning

Dinosaur mascot

Language: English

Published by: UCD Press

Published on: 1st March 2024

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9781739086336


Introduction

The Republic of Ireland has changed much in the last few decades. It has become much more socially liberal, urban, secular and wealthy. It has also experienced large-scale immigration during a period when other Anglophone and many other European countries mainstream political parties have witnessed the exploitation of anti-immigrant nativism by some political mainstream parties as well as by the far right.

Focus of the Book

Diverse Republic examines, as part of a wider focus on how immigration has changed Irish society, the emergence of anti-immigrant far-right groups through a focus on some key figures within these. It also considers the response of mainstream politics to immigration and examines efforts to encourage the integration of newcomers.

Part One: Irish Society and Identity

The first part of the book examines how Irish society and identity has changed since the foundation of the state. This is relevant to the second part, which examines how and to what extent far right anti-immigration politics are likely to flourish or not in the Irish case.

Part Two: Far-Right Politics and Immigration

The second part of the book examines the appeal of far-right political responses to immigration in a context where some Irish citizens no longer appear to be represented by the political mainstream and where nativist populists lay claim to the symbols and heroes of the Republic.

Conclusion and Recommendations

Diverse Republic makes the case for proactive measures to promote immigrant integration and social cohesion through citizenship, social policy and community development. It engages with shifting nationalist understandings of Irishness and makes the case for taking these seriously even if anti-immigrant nativist nationalism has found only fringe support in Irish politics to date. The symbols and history of what has become a diverse Republic should not become the property of those who would exclude some of its citizens.

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