This is the first book to comprehensively examine the shifts that have informed republican tradition and transformation from the beginning of the "Troubles" in Northern Ireland until the final stages of the peace process. Using a combination of empirical research and literature, the book addresses Northern Irish republican identity through the influences of imagination, history and Catholicism before it charts the processes of decision-making and management that shaped the transition from militarism to politics. Drawing from interview material from a wide range of actors and key players the book considers the challenges that political republicanism has worked to overcome and concludes that ongoing political development will require a less acute, more ambiguous communication of values based on pragmatism and compromise, rather than the continued articulation of principles and convictions that sustained the armed struggle.A unique work, From Armed Struggle to Political Struggle is essential for students and researchers in Irish politics, conflict resolution, and security studies
Graham Spencer is Reader in Politics, Conflict and the Media at the University of Portsmouth, UK and Distinguished Senior Research Fellow at the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for Conflict Intervention, NUI, Maynooth, Ireland.
AcknowledgementsIntroductionChapter One: ImaginationMythMartyrdomMetaphorChapter Two: HistoryOrigins and dynamicsRe-emergenceMilitancyHunger and transitionChapter Three: CatholicismHistory and contextReasoning and moralityThe Catholic Church and republicanismCatholic perspectives on republicanismRepublican perspectives on CatholicismChapter Four: PoliticsDialogues with nationalismSDLP perspectivesChapter Five: PeaceThe Good Friday AgreementBritish and Irish Official perspectivesEndgame: After Good FridayChapter Six: Rebels and ReconciliationThe ‘dissident’ threatClaiming the past to shape the futureConclusionBibliographyIndex
Spencer has made a significant contribution to the existing literature on Provisional Republicanism. From Armed Struggle to Political Struggle will be of interest to anyone working on the Troubles and the peace process.