Browsing by Author "Byrne, Anne"
Now showing items 1-20 of 46
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Academic Women's Studies in the Republic of Ireland
Byrne, Anne (Feminist Press, 1992)[No abstract available] -
Altering legacies as ‘A Farmer in My Own Right’: married women's experiences of farm property ownership in Ireland
Watson, Tanya (NUI Galway, 2018-01-31)A number of women living on family farms own farm property in their own right. This is an unexplored research area in Ireland. Gender inequalities in the ownership and control of farm property have consequences for women’s ... -
Autobiography, chocolate creams and letterpress printing
Byrne, Anne (Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain, 2018-01)In response to the call for printed works on paper to recognise the creative contribution made by the Woolfs and the Hogarth Press to printing, art, literature and book culture as part of the 27th annual international ... -
Caught in the Cultural Lag: The Stigma of Singlehood
Carr, Deborah; Byrne, Anne (Psychology Press, 2005) -
Developing a Sociological Model for Researching Women's Self and Social Identities
Byrne, Anne (Sage, 2003)For those interested in researching the consequences of strong ideologies on women's identities, an empirical model that focuses our research attention on the self-identity and social identity of individual women may be ... -
Developing a sociological model for researching women’s self and social identities
Byrne, Anne (SAGE Publications, 2003-11-01)This paper presents an empirical model for researching women's self and social identities. The model was devised as a theoretical and methodological framework to assist the author to recognize self-identity and social ... -
Developing inclusive research methodologies: testing the voice centred relational method of qualitative data analysis in a collaborative research project on early school leaving
Millar, Michelle; Canavan, John; Byrne, Anne (Child & Family Research and Policy Unit, WHB/ NUI Galway., 2004)Committed to developing collaborative research processes and practices, this study sought to establish research partnerships between academic researchers, activists working in a context of social exclusion and those ... -
Echanges épistolaires Echanges épistolaires en anthropologie : l'enquête Harvard-Irlande/ Letters in anthropological research: the Harvard-Irish Survey (1930-1936)
Byrne, Anne (2011)This article examines a selection of the professional and private letters associated with the social anthropology strand of the Harvard-Irish Survey (1930-1936). These research letters contribute to the historiography of ... -
Epistolary research relations: Correspondences in anthropological research: Arensberg, Kimball, and the Harvard-Irish Survey, 1930 1936
Byrne, Anne (University of Notre Dame Press, 2017-10)In public and personal archives scattered throughout the United States lie the professional correspondences and personal letters of the Harvard-Irish Survey research team (1930 36) that came to Ireland in the early years ... -
Familist ideologies and difficult identities
Byrne, Anne (Macmillan, 1999-12-01)[No abstract available] -
Family and Community: (Re)Telling Our Own Story
Byrne, Anne (2011)The contribution of family, kin and community relations to sustaining a rural way of life was the primary focus of Arensberg and Kimball's anthropological study of Irish families in the 1930s, published as Family and ... -
Finding ‘Room to Manoeuvre’: Gender, agency and the family farm
Byrne, Anne; Duvvury, Nata; Macken-Walsh, Áine; Watson, Tanya (Rowman and Littlefield, 2014)Women on Irish farms have been a subject of feminist analysis over the past two decades. Salient themes in the literature on farm women have been the constraints of patriarchal agriculture (O'Hara 1997; Shortall, 2004), ... -
Forgetting and Remembering: Place and Space in the work of Yvonne Cullivan
Byrne, Anne (Department of the Environment, Community and Local Government, IRELAND, 2011) -
The Galway Art Gallery Collection and Roger Fry's The Pond (1921)
Byrne, Anne (Galway Archaeological and Historical Society, 2016)Following fragments of evidence that are suggestive of Bloomsbury-Irish connections, this article concerns Roger Fry, his passion for painting, for people, for places and for new ideas. Charleston, the home of Bell and ... -
Gender and sustainability in rural Ireland
Byrne, Anne; Shorthall, Sally (Routledge, 2016-11-15)This chapter considers if and how gender is relevant for the sustainability of rural Ireland. When we refer to rural sustainability we mean the continuation of the economic, social, institutional and environmental ... -
Gender, Power and Property: In my own right . The Rural Economy Development Programme (REDP) Working Paper Series
Byrne, Anne; Duvvury, Nata; Macken-Walsh, Áine; Watson, Tanya (Rural Economy Development Programme, 2013-11)Women on farms in Ireland are a subject of feminist analysis for five decades. Salient themes are the constraints of patriarchal agriculture (O'Hara 1997; Shortall, 2004), the invisibility of women's farm work (Viney 1968; ... -
Generational understanding of social support, youth civic engagement and coping as aspects of resilience in socialist and post-socialist Slovenia (1980-2011)
Kovačič, Tanja (2015-09-30)This thesis explores the link between protective factors and youth coping as aspects of resilience within the context of social change. The most recent evidence from resilience research shows there is a significant link ... -
Introduction to the Third Edition of Arensberg and Kimball and Anthropological Research in Ireland'
Byrne, Anne; Edmondson, Ricca; Varley, Tony (CLASP, 2001) -
Ireland, The Nation and the Woolfs, Part 1
Byrne, Anne (Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain, 2019-05)Readers may be familiar with Virginia Woolf s diary entries concerning the shriek of agony that marked the death by hunger strike in October 1920 of the Lord Mayor of Cork, Terence MacSwiney, as well as the violence in ... -
Ireland, The Nation and the Woolfs, Part 2
Byrne, Anne (Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain, 2019-09)In The Nation editorials reproduced here from 9 October 1920, Leonard Woolf s succinct, clear writing style, consummate storytelling ability, and forceful declarative statements come to the fore. The opening paragraph of ...