Economic Aid, Marginalization, and Peacebuilding in Northern Ireland

Economic aid and peacebuilding efforts to transform the Northern Ireland conflict impact grassroots, civil society organizations (CSOs) and vulnerable people of concern. Brexit is an example of how democracies privilege white, cisgender, heterosexual, able-bodied voices, exclude marginalized voices...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inAsian journal of peacebuilding Vol. 10; no. 1; pp. 287 - 304
Main Authors Sean Byrne, Robert C. Mizzi, Nancy Hansen, Tara Sheppard-luangkhot
Format Journal Article
LanguageKorean
Published 서울대학교 통일평화연구원 31.05.2022
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Economic aid and peacebuilding efforts to transform the Northern Ireland conflict impact grassroots, civil society organizations (CSOs) and vulnerable people of concern. Brexit is an example of how democracies privilege white, cisgender, heterosexual, able-bodied voices, exclude marginalized voices from peacebuilding efforts, and maintain structural violence that exacerbates sectarian identity conflicts. A qualitative methodology was used to interview 120 participants who shared their experiences of grassroots peacebuilding efforts to transform the Northern Ireland conflict. Findings revealed that community audits are critical to inclusion of local needs, and helped to assess what escalates conflict, British job cuts create needs that overwhelm CSOs and youth who feel hopeless are attracted to sectarian paramilitary groups. They reject peace and trigger further conflict as a result.
Bibliography:Institute for Peace and Unification Studies Seoul National University
ISSN:2288-2693