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Sean Byrne

    Poverty in pre-Famine Westmeath
    Civil Society, Peacebuilding, and Economic Assistance in Northern Ireland
    • Civil Society, Peacebuilding, and Economic Assistance in Northern Ireland

      Local Knowledge, Wisdom, and Practices

      • 196 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      Focusing on the vital contributions of local peacebuilders in Northern Ireland, the book delves into their efforts to foster reconciliation in a post-conflict society. It highlights the various challenges they encounter, including political tensions and community divisions, while exploring the impact of grassroots initiatives on long-term peace. Through case studies and personal narratives, the work emphasizes the importance of local agency in building sustainable peace and the complexities involved in the peacebuilding process.

      Civil Society, Peacebuilding, and Economic Assistance in Northern Ireland
    • The scale of the Great Famine of 1846 has overshadowed the prevalence of extreme poverty in Ireland in the period 1815- 45. As economic conditions deteriorated between those years, population increased rapidly. From the 1820s onwards, in the wake of famines and epidemics and an increase in agrarian violence, pressure mounted on the British government to address the problem of poverty in Ireland. In 1833 the government established the Royal Commission for Inquiring into the Condition of the Poorer Classes in Ireland. The commission investigated poverty by holding public enquiry sessions, in which the poorest people participated, in seventeen counties. The reports of those public session provide a detailed account of poverty in 1830s Ireland. This book uses the findings of the Poor Inquiry for Co. Westmeath to give an account of economic and social conditions in the county in the decade before the Famine.

      Poverty in pre-Famine Westmeath