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Now showing items 71-80 of 93
Understanding the farmer-farm relationship in later life
(Teagasc, 2018-05-24)
Research from NUI Galway looks at the complex and deeply emotional
relationships older farmers have with their farms, and the impact this has on
family farm transfer.
Ireland's abortion regime on the world stage: Performative acts and the claim to state sovereignty in foreign policy discourse
(LIT Verlag, 2017)
[No abstract available]
Finding ‘Room to Manoeuvre’: Gender, agency and the family farm
(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), ...
Ethical Issues in Internet Research: International Good Practice and Irish Research Ethics Documents
(Research-publishing.net, 2013)
This chapter discusses the main research ethical concerns that arise
in internet research and reviews existing research ethical guidance
in the Irish context in relation to its application to internet research.
The ...
Rural emigration to international destinations and return: a perspective from Ireland
(Faculty of Letters, University of Porto, 2019)
This chapter aims to contribute to a better understanding of international emigration from and return to rural areas
using evidence from Ireland. The paper introduces key concepts relating to migration and return more ...
New opportunities and cautionary steps? Farmers, forestry and rural development in Ireland
(Sciendo, 2011-03-30)
It is argued that European agriculture is currently confronted with a multitude of
critical challenges and developmental changes, in which the viability of farms based
solely on traditional forms of production applies ...
Memorialising Gaelic Ireland: the curious case of the Ballyshannon fragments and the Irish monuments at San Pietro in Montorio, Rome
(Guildhall Press, 2010)
The burial place of the exiled Irish at San Pietro in Montorio, Rome (Pl. 1), is perhaps the most iconic Irish
diaspora funerary site in Europe, not least because the community interred there (1608–23) are found in ...
Globalising the Easter Rising: 1916 and the challenge to empires
(Routledge, 2017-11-16)
The year 1916 has recently been identified as “a tipping point for the intensification of
protests, riots, uprisings and even revolutions.”1 Many of these constituted a challenge to the
international pre-war order of ...
From Milan to Kilbaha: Bronzing Irish traditional music
(Irish American Cultural Institute, 2019)
Monuments represent important anchoring devices, tying “collective remembering” to physical places and mobilizing a sense of
shared memory and identity consolidation (Rowlands and Tilley
500).1
In the specifically Irish ...
Musical statues: Monumentalising Irish traditional music
(Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier, 2015)
The year 2016 has generated a considerable degree of both academic and popular
interest into processes of remembering and public forms of commemoration which in
turn provoke questions about the meaning and interpretation ...