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Belfast

Belfast

Peter Shirlow | Brendan Murtagh

(2006)

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Book Details

Abstract

Paris, Jerusalem and Belfast are cities that are shaped by political violence, death and the injustices caused by segregated living. But divided cities are becoming places within which policy makers and politicians project an image of normality despite the facts of social injustice, victimhood and harm.

It is a commonly held view that the city of Belfast is emerging out of conflict and into a new era of tolerance and transformation. This book challenges this viewpoint. The authors pinpoint how international peace accords, such as the Belfast Agreement, are gradually eroded as conflict shifts into a stale and repetitive pattern of ethnically-divided competition over resources.

This book is a vivid portrait of how segregation, lived experience and fear are linked in a manner that undermines democratic accountability. It argues that the control of place remains the most important weapon in the politicisation of communities and the reproduction of political violence. Segregation provides the laboratory within which sectarianism continues to grow.

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Contents 3
Introduction 7
1 Even in Death Do Us Stay Apart 19
2 The Belfast Disagreement 38
3 Interfacing, Violence and Wicked Problems 63
4 Between Segregated Communities 87
5 Coasting in the Other City 107
6 Workspaces, Segregation and Mixing 130
7 Ethnic Poker: Policy and the Divided City 149
8 Conclusion 177
Notes 188
References 190
Index 202