A History of the Northern Ireland Labour Party: Democratic Socialism and Sectarianism

Awards:   Short-listed for PSAI (Political Studies Association Ireland) Brian Farrell Best Book Prize 2011 (Ireland)
Author:   Aaron Edwards ,  Steven Fielding ,  John Callaghan ,  Steve Ludlam
Publisher:   Manchester University Press
ISBN:  

9780719078743


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   01 March 2009
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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A History of the Northern Ireland Labour Party: Democratic Socialism and Sectarianism


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Awards

  • Short-listed for PSAI (Political Studies Association Ireland) Brian Farrell Best Book Prize 2011 (Ireland)

Overview

This book is the first definitive history of the Northern Ireland Labour Party (NILP), a unique political force which drew its support from Protestants and Catholics and became electorally viable despite deep-seated ethnic, religious and national divisions. Formed in 1924 and disbanded in 1987, the NILP succeeded in returning several of its members to the locally-based Northern Ireland parliament in 1925-29 and 1958-72 and polled some 100,000 votes in both the 1964 and the 1970 British general elections. As British Labour's 'sister' party in the province from the late 1920s until the late 1970s, the NILP could rely on substantive fraternal and organisational support at critical junctures in its history. Despite its political successes the NILP's significance has been downplayed by historians, partly because of the lack of empirical evidence and partly to reinforce the simplistic view of Northern Ireland as the site of the most protracted sectarian conflict in modern Europe.For the first time this book brings together important archival sources and the oral testimonies of former NILP members to explain the enigma of an extraordinary political party operating in extraordinary circumstances. The book situates the NILP's successes and failures in a broad historical framework, providing the reader with a balanced account of twentieth-century Northern Irish political history. This book will appeal to students and scholars of labour movements, as well as non-specialists who wish to learn more about the NILP's brand of democratic socialism, its ideological and logistical ties to British Labour and the character of its cross-sectarian membership. -- .

Full Product Details

Author:   Aaron Edwards ,  Steven Fielding ,  John Callaghan ,  Steve Ludlam
Publisher:   Manchester University Press
Imprint:   Manchester University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.544kg
ISBN:  

9780719078743


ISBN 10:   0719078741
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   01 March 2009
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

Table of Contents

Series Editors' Foreword Acknowledgements Abbreviations List of tables and figures Introduction 1. Democratic Socialism and Sectarianism, 1924-45 2. Re-appraising the Origins of the ‘Consensus-Forming Strategy’, 1945-58 3. The Labour Opposition of Northern Ireland, 1958-65 4. The Failure of the ‘Consensus-Forming Strategy’, 1965-69 5. The NILP in Retreat, 1969-72 6. The Fall of the NILP, 1972-75 7. Squeezing the Moderates, 1975-87 Conclusion Index -- .

Reviews

Edwards' book, A History of the Northern Ireland Labour Party... outlines the history of a valiant attempt to represent working class interests and forge better relationships across the divide. However, the forces of reaction and sectarianism always threatened and finally destroyed the NILP. The story... [Edwards] relates clarifies and amplifies what happened. Roy Garland, The Irish News, April 2009 -- Roy Garland. The Irish Times Has Edwards succeeded in persuading us that the history of the Northern Ireland Labour Party has more than a nostalgia value for those who find the cruder communal realities of Irish politics unappealing? The answer has to be a resounding yes... Edwards has performed an invaluable service to all those interested in the modern history of Ireland by recreating a lost world: that of the post-war working class, particularly its predominantly Protestant skilled and unionised section... He provides the reader with a detailed and convincing set of portraits of key Labour activists like Billy Boyd and Beatrice Boyd, Sam Napier and Charles Brett as they worked tirelessly to cement relations with Labour in the rest of the UK and expose the narrow sectarian seaminess of much of unionist politics and administration. Professor Henry Patterson, Irish Political Studies, 2010 -- Professor Henry Patterson. Irish Political Studies It is a timely publication... In like manner, the wealth of detail in Edwards' history is a welcome corrective to the often deterministic accounts produced by political scientists... Dr N.C. Fleming, Twentieth Century British History, Vol. 21, No. 1, 2010 -- Dr N.C. Fleming. Twentieth Century British History The wide-ranging nature of this well-researched volume fills a sizable gap in the published study of the workings of the Northern Ireland Labour Party... the study is an excellent history of the NILP which utilises all the available sources, and is a useful book that should appeal to undergraduates and academic alike. James Condren, Political Studies Review, 2010 -- James Condren. Political Studies Review 'Edwards draws upon impressive research to support his thesis... The evidence which he has assembled unquestionably demonstrates that the NILP made electoral headway in majority Protestant and Catholic areas as well as in mixed districts - and not just in the greater Belfast region either... Edwards shows again and again that 'commentators [have] overemphasised the NILP's meteoric decline'... Historians of post-war Northern Ireland will find much in Edwards' book to interest them as well as to infuriate them'. Dr Simon Prince, Contemporary British History, 2010 -- Dr Simon Prince. Contemporary British History Edwards is, therefore, to be commended for his effort to rescue the NILP from the historical ghetto. He has mined such sources that are available (including British Labour Party records and oral history) to produce a coherent and sympathetic account that is, however, no whitewash. From his account, it is clear that, from its foundation in 1924 until the end of World War II, the party formed a fairly insignificant challenge to Unionism... [T]his book serves as a valuable reminder of the ambivalent position that Northern Ireland held (and still holds) within the United Kingdom. It reminds us that the instinct to treat the province's problems as peculiarly local and indigenous, separate from the 'normal' history of the rest of the UK, must be resisted. With luck, Edwards's work will encourage historians of the British Labour Party to integrate the story of the NILP much more firmly into their own accounts. Dr Richard Toye, Parliamentary History, Vol. 29, No. 2, 2010 -- Dr Richard Toye. Parliamentary History 'It is testament to Aaron Edwards that this book on the NILP will be of interest to the general reader as well as historians... Particularly impressive are the individual portraits of those who have slipped through the cracks of the North's political map, once giants now footnotes: Harry Midgley, Tom Boyd, Sam Napier, Vivian Simpson, Billy Boyd... Things are different in the history books. Edwards' analysis shows teeth, as if learning from his subject's diminution, baring them in terse, skilful ways. Architects and adherents of the seemingly endless Unionist-Nationalist cleavage will be thoroughly confounded by Edwards' objectivity... As the Party foundered on faithful sectarian rocks the faces of those who marshalled its momentum faded from view, their endeavour a lost tomb. This scholarly but readable work illuminates a forgotten corner and acknowledges them'. Connal Parr, Fortnight, No. 475, March/April 2011 -- Connal Parr. Fortnight


Edwards' book, A History of the Northern Ireland Labour Party. outlines the history of a valiant attempt to represent working class interests and forge better relationships across the divide. However, the forces of reaction and sectarianism always threatened and finally destroyed the NILP. The story. [Edwards] relates clarifies and amplifies what happened. Roy Garland, The Irish News, April 2009 Has Edwards succeeded in persuading us that the history of the Northern Ireland Labour Party has more than a nostalgia value for those who find the cruder communal realities of Irish politics unappealing? The answer has to be a resounding yes. Edwards has performed an invaluable service to all those interested in the modern history of Ireland by recreating a lost world: that of the post-war working class, particularly its predominantly Protestant skilled and unionised section. He provides the reader with a detailed and convincing set of portraits of key Labour activists like Billy Boyd and Beatrice Boyd, Sam Napier and Charles Brett as they worked tirelessly to cement relations with Labour in the rest of the UK and expose the narrow sectarian seaminess of much of unionist politics and administration. Professor Henry Patterson, Irish Political Studies, 2010 It is a timely publication. In like manner, the wealth of detail in Edwards' history is a welcome corrective to the often deterministic accounts produced by political scientists. Dr N.C. Fleming, Twentieth Century British History, Vol. 21, No. 1, 2010 The wide-ranging nature of this well-researched volume fills a sizable gap in the published study of the workings of the Northern Ireland Labour Party. the study is an excellent history of the NILP which utilises all the available sources, and is a useful book that should appeal to undergraduates and academic alike. James Condren, Political Studies Review, 2010 'Edwards draws upon impressive research to support his thesis... The evidence which he has assembled unquestionably demonstrates that the NILP made electoral headway in majority Protestant and Catholic areas as well as in mixed districts - and not just in the greater Belfast region either. Edwards shows again and again that 'commentators [have] overemphasised the NILP's meteoric decline'. Historians of post-war Northern Ireland will find much in Edwards' book to interest them as well as to infuriate them'. Dr Simon Prince, Contemporary British History, 2010 Edwards is, therefore, to be commended for his effort to rescue the NILP from the historical ghetto. He has mined such sources that are available (including British Labour Party records and oral history) to produce a coherent and sympathetic account that is, however, no whitewash. From his account, it is clear that, from its foundation in 1924 until the end of World War II, the party formed a fairly insignificant challenge to Unionism. [T]his book serves as a valuable reminder of the ambivalent position that Northern Ireland held (and still holds) within the United Kingdom. It reminds us that the instinct to treat the province's problems as peculiarly local and indigenous, separate from the 'normal' history of the rest of the UK, must be resisted. With luck, Edwards's work will encourage historians of the British Labour Party to integrate the story of the NILP much more firmly into their own accounts. Dr Richard Toye, Parliamentary History, Vol. 29, No. 2, 2010 'It is testament to Aaron Edwards that this book on the NILP will be of interest to the general reader as well as historians. Particularly impressive are the individual portraits of those who have slipped through the cracks of the North's political map, once giants now footnotes: Harry Midgley, Tom Boyd, Sam Napier, Vivian Simpson, Billy Boyd. Things are different in the history books. Edwards' analysis shows teeth, as if learning from his subject's diminution, baring them in terse, skilful ways. Architects and adherents of the seemingly endless Unionist-Nationalist cleavage will be thoroughly confounded by Edwards' objectivity. As the Party foundered on faithful sectarian rocks the faces of those who marshalled its momentum faded from view, their endeavour a lost tomb. This scholarly but readable work illuminates a forgotten corner and acknowledges them'. Connal Parr, Fortnight, No. 475, March/April 2011 Aaron Edwards presents a highly readable account of the Northern Ireland Labour Party...A model study of the party's successes and lows, weaving interviews with former party members with detailed archival trawls. -- .


Edwards' book, A History of the Northern Ireland Labour Party... outlines the history of a valiant attempt to represent working class interests and forge better relationships across the divide. However, the forces of reaction and sectarianism always threatened and finally destroyed the NILP. The story... [Edwards] relates clarifies and amplifies what happened. Roy Garland, The Irish News, April 2009 Has Edwards succeeded in persuading us that the history of the Northern Ireland Labour Party has more than a nostalgia value for those who find the cruder communal realities of Irish politics unappealing? The answer has to be a resounding yes... Edwards has performed an invaluable service to all those interested in the modern history of Ireland by recreating a lost world: that of the post-war working class, particularly its predominantly Protestant skilled and unionised section... He provides the reader with a detailed and convincing set of portraits of key Labour activists like Billy Boyd and Beatrice Boyd, Sam Napier and Charles Brett as they worked tirelessly to cement relations with Labour in the rest of the UK and expose the narrow sectarian seaminess of much of unionist politics and administration. Professor Henry Patterson, Irish Political Studies, 2010 It is a timely publication... In like manner, the wealth of detail in Edwards' history is a welcome corrective to the often deterministic accounts produced by political scientists... Dr N.C. Fleming, Twentieth Century British History, Vol. 21, No. 1, 2010 The wide-ranging nature of this well-researched volume fills a sizable gap in the published study of the workings of the Northern Ireland Labour Party... the study is an excellent history of the NILP which utilises all the available sources, and is a useful book that should appeal to undergraduates and academic alike. James Condren, Political Studies Review, 2010 'Edwards draws upon impressive research to support his thesis... The evidence which he has assembled unquestionably demonstrates that the NILP made electoral headway in majority Protestant and Catholic areas as well as in mixed districts - and not just in the greater Belfast region either... Edwards shows again and again that 'commentators [have] overemphasised the NILP's meteoric decline'... Historians of post-war Northern Ireland will find much in Edwards' book to interest them as well as to infuriate them'. Dr Simon Prince, Contemporary British History, 2010 Edwards is, therefore, to be commended for his effort to rescue the NILP from the historical ghetto. He has mined such sources that are available (including British Labour Party records and oral history) to produce a coherent and sympathetic account that is, however, no whitewash. From his account, it is clear that, from its foundation in 1924 until the end of World War II, the party formed a fairly insignificant challenge to Unionism... [T]his book serves as a valuable reminder of the ambivalent position that Northern Ireland held (and still holds) within the United Kingdom. It reminds us that the instinct to treat the province's problems as peculiarly local and indigenous, separate from the 'normal' history of the rest of the UK, must be resisted. With luck, Edwards's work will encourage historians of the British Labour Party to integrate the story of the NILP much more firmly into their own accounts. Dr Richard Toye, Parliamentary History, Vol. 29, No. 2, 2010 'It is testament to Aaron Edwards that this book on the NILP will be of interest to the general reader as well as historians... Particularly impressive are the individual portraits of those who have slipped through the cracks of the North's political map, once giants now footnotes: Harry Midgley, Tom Boyd, Sam Napier, Vivian Simpson, Billy Boyd... Things are different in the history books. Edwards' analysis shows teeth, as if learning from his subject's diminution, baring them in terse, skilful ways. Architects and adherents of the seemingly endless Unionist-Nationalist cleavage will be thoroughly confounded by Edwards' objectivity... As the Party foundered on faithful sectarian rocks the faces of those who marshalled its momentum faded from view, their endeavour a lost tomb. This scholarly but readable work illuminates a forgotten corner and acknowledges them'. Connal Parr, Fortnight, No. 475, March/April 2011 Aaron Edwards presents a highly readable account of the Northern Ireland Labour Party......A model study of the party's successes and lows, weaving interviews with former party members with detailed archival trawls. -- .


Edwards' book, A History of the Northern Ireland Labour Party... outlines the history of a valiant attempt to represent working class interests and forge better relationships across the divide. However, the forces of reaction and sectarianism always threatened and finally destroyed the NILP. The story... [Edwards] relates clarifies and amplifies what happened. Roy Garland, The Irish News, April 2009 -- Roy Garland. The Irish Times Has Edwards succeeded in persuading us that the history of the Northern Ireland Labour Party has more than a nostalgia value for those who find the cruder communal realities of Irish politics unappealing? The answer has to be a resounding yes... Edwards has performed an invaluable service to all those interested in the modern history of Ireland by recreating a lost world: that of the post-war working class, particularly its predominantly Protestant skilled and unionised section... He provides the reader with a detailed and convincing set of portraits of key Labour activists like Billy Boyd and Beatrice Boyd, Sam Napier and Charles Brett as they worked tirelessly to cement relations with Labour in the rest of the UK and expose the narrow sectarian seaminess of much of unionist politics and administration. Professor Henry Patterson, Irish Political Studies, 2010 -- Professor Henry Patterson. Irish Political Studies It is a timely publication... In like manner, the wealth of detail in Edwards' history is a welcome corrective to the often deterministic accounts produced by political scientists... Dr N.C. Fleming, Twentieth Century British History, Vol. 21, No. 1, 2010 -- Dr N.C. Fleming. Twentieth Century British History The wide-ranging nature of this well-researched volume fills a sizable gap in the published study of the workings of the Northern Ireland Labour Party... the study is an excellent history of the NILP which utilises all the available sources, and is a useful book that should appeal to undergraduates and academic alike. James Condren, Political Studies Review, 2010 -- James Condren. Political Studies Review 'Edwards draws upon impressive research to support his thesis... The evidence which he has assembled unquestionably demonstrates that the NILP made electoral headway in majority Protestant and Catholic areas as well as in mixed districts - and not just in the greater Belfast region either... Edwards shows again and again that 'commentators [have] overemphasised the NILP's meteoric decline'... Historians of post-war Northern Ireland will find much in Edwards' book to interest them as well as to infuriate them'. Dr Simon Prince, Contemporary British History, 2010 -- Dr Simon Prince. Contemporary British History Edwards is, therefore, to be commended for his effort to rescue the NILP from the historical ghetto. He has mined such sources that are available (including British Labour Party records and oral history) to produce a coherent and sympathetic account that is, however, no whitewash. From his account, it is clear that, from its foundation in 1924 until the end of World War II, the party formed a fairly insignificant challenge to Unionism... [T]his book serves as a valuable reminder of the ambivalent position that Northern Ireland held (and still holds) within the United Kingdom. It reminds us that the instinct to treat the province's problems as peculiarly local and indigenous, separate from the 'normal' history of the rest of the UK, must be resisted. With luck, Edwards's work will encourage historians of the British Labour Party to integrate the story of the NILP much more firmly into their own accounts. Dr Richard Toye, Parliamentary History, Vol. 29, No. 2, 2010 -- Dr Richard Toye. Parliamentary History 'It is testament to Aaron Edwards that this book on the NILP will be of interest to the general reader as well as historians... Particularly impressive are the individual portraits of those who have slipped through the cracks of the North's political map, once giants now footnotes: Harry Midgley, Tom Boyd, Sam Napier, Vivian Simpson, Billy Boyd... Things are different in the history books. Edwards' analysis shows teeth, as if learning from his subject's diminution, baring them in terse, skilful ways. Architects and adherents of the seemingly endless Unionist-Nationalist cleavage will be thoroughly confounded by Edwards' objectivity... As the Party foundered on faithful sectarian rocks the faces of those who marshalled its momentum faded from view, their endeavour a lost tomb. This scholarly but readable work illuminates a forgotten corner and acknowledges them'. Connal Parr, Fortnight, No. 475, March/April 2011 -- Connal Parr. Fortnight Aaron Edwards presents a highly readable account of the Northern Ireland Labour Party...A model study of the party's successes and lows, weaving interviews with former party members with detailed archival trawls. -- Jonathon Tonge.


Author Information

Aaron Edwards is Senior Lecturer in Defence and International Affairs at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst

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