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Author = Haynes, Amanda;
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Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 42 on page 1 of 2
Marked
Mark
‘Sicherheit’: examining residents’ perceptions of community safety in working-class residential areas undergoing regeneration in Limerick City, Ireland
(2018)
Power, Martin J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin; Barnes, Cliona
‘Sicherheit’: examining residents’ perceptions of community safety in working-class residential areas undergoing regeneration in Limerick City, Ireland
(2018)
Power, Martin J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin; Barnes, Cliona
Abstract:
This paper examines the perceptions of residents’ in two housing estates in Limerick, a peripheral Irish city, on how (un)safety effects their day-to-day lives and is an intrinsic element in the production and reproduction of their urban territories. In focusing on these areas which are currently ‘undergoing’ the largest urban regeneration project in the history of the Irish State, our analysis provides new insights into the intersections between regeneration processes and (un)sicherheit. Significantly, our findings demonstrate that regeneration processes, often billed as enhancing community safety, can in fact contribute to destabilising the triumvirate of safety, certainty and security.
ACCEPTED
peer-reviewed
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8849
Marked
Mark
"Out of the shadows: legislating for hate crime in Ireland" - preliminary findings
(2015)
Haynes, Amanda; Schweppe, Jennifer; Carr, James; Carmody, Niamh; Enright, Shannen
"Out of the shadows: legislating for hate crime in Ireland" - preliminary findings
(2015)
Haynes, Amanda; Schweppe, Jennifer; Carr, James; Carmody, Niamh; Enright, Shannen
Abstract:
n/a
In October 2014 the Irish Council for Civil Liberties, in association with the NGO Working Party on Hate Crime, commissioned the Hate and Hostility Research Group at the University of Limerick to investigate the case for the introduction of hate crime legislation in Ireland. This Report represents the preliminary findings of this research. It addresses the treatment of the hate element of crimes under existing law, the suitability of various options for legislative reform to the Irish criminal justice system and presents proposals for legislative reform.
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/4751
Marked
Mark
A cosy consensus on deviant discourse: How the refugee and asylum seeker meta-narrative has endorsed an interpretative crisis in relation to the transnational politics of the world's displaced persons.
(2004)
Breen, Michael J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin
A cosy consensus on deviant discourse: How the refugee and asylum seeker meta-narrative has endorsed an interpretative crisis in relation to the transnational politics of the world's displaced persons.
(2004)
Breen, Michael J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/1838
Marked
Mark
A cosy consensus on deviant discourse: how the refugee and asylum seeker meta-narrative has endorsed an interpretive crisis in relation to the transnational politics of world's displaced persons
(2004)
Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin; Breen, Michael J.
A cosy consensus on deviant discourse: how the refugee and asylum seeker meta-narrative has endorsed an interpretive crisis in relation to the transnational politics of world's displaced persons
(2004)
Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin; Breen, Michael J.
Abstract:
Immigration is a key feature in late capitalist societies, with some 20,000,000 displaced persons worldwide. This paper reports on coverage of refugees and asylum seekers in English-language newspapers worldwide, drawing on media content between 2003 and 2004. It analyses media discourse on refugees and asylum seekers across the world, with a particular focus on deconstructing negative coverage. Five dominant negative frames in international media discourses are identified. These themes are examined in the context of theories of racism and xenophobia to highlight their negative potential for displaced persons and attitudes towards them in their host countries. Theory is also employed to explore the potential utility of such negative narratives for the media and social elites. The work being presented here is part of a much larger research project being undertaken by the authors at the University of Limerick. (For preliminary findings see Devereux and Breen, 2003 and 2004).
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3632
Marked
Mark
A life free from fear: legislating for hate crime in Ireland: An NGO perspective
(2014)
Schweppe, Jennifer; Haynes, Amanda; Carr, James
A life free from fear: legislating for hate crime in Ireland: An NGO perspective
(2014)
Schweppe, Jennifer; Haynes, Amanda; Carr, James
Abstract:
The aim of this report is to progress the discussion of and generate an impetus for, legislative change in the area of hate crime in Ireland.
PUBLISHED
non-peer-reviewed
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/4485
Marked
Mark
Against the grain: counter-hegemonic representations of pre and post 'Celtic-Tiger' Ireland in the 'Protest' songs of Damien Dempsey
(2018)
Dillane, Aileen; Power, Martin J.; Devereux, Eoin; Haynes, Amanda
Against the grain: counter-hegemonic representations of pre and post 'Celtic-Tiger' Ireland in the 'Protest' songs of Damien Dempsey
(2018)
Dillane, Aileen; Power, Martin J.; Devereux, Eoin; Haynes, Amanda
Abstract:
A renowned Irish journalist said that the heady rise and abrupt fall of Ireland’s ‘Celtic Tiger’1 economy, , made “Icarus look surprisingly boring” (O’Toole 2010, 10). In the aftermath of the 2008 global financial crisis, the Irish State effectively socialised the astronomical debts of private banks (McDonough and Loughrey 2009), which required a ‘bail out’ programme from the so-called Troika – consisting of the European Central Bank, International Monetary Fund and European Commission – to be put in place.2 Since then, the Irish public has been exposed to extensive, austeritydriven policies and a repetitive mantra from politicians and mainstream media that the protracted austerity programme pursued was vital if Ireland was to satisfy ‘the markets’, ‘reduce the deficit’ and ‘regain economic competitiveness’. Moreover, vulnerable groups have been scapegoated as parasitic on a system that, they argue, can no longer afford them or support their requirements in terms of housing, healthc...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8844
Marked
Mark
Behind the headlines: media coverage of social exclusion in Limerick City - the case of Moyross
(2011)
Devereux, Eoin; Haynes, Amanda; Power, Martin J.
Behind the headlines: media coverage of social exclusion in Limerick City - the case of Moyross
(2011)
Devereux, Eoin; Haynes, Amanda; Power, Martin J.
Abstract:
no abstract available
ACCEPTED
Peer reviewed
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3819
Marked
Mark
Behind the headlines: media coverage of social exclusion in Limerick City - The case of Moyross
(2011)
Devereux, Eoin; Haynes, Amanda; Power, Martin J.
Behind the headlines: media coverage of social exclusion in Limerick City - The case of Moyross
(2011)
Devereux, Eoin; Haynes, Amanda; Power, Martin J.
Abstract:
In a media setting, and within the public mind, Ireland’s ‘Third City’ has acquired an intensely negative reputation over time. While there are many historical precedents for the maligning of the place’s image, it is generally agreed that the 1980s reached a new low within media practice with the ascription, in some media quarters, of the label ‘Stab City’ to Limerick. The blanket representation of Limerick as a place of crime, social disorder, poverty and social exclusion has continued and it has been amplified in recent years, particularly in the context of the feuds between rival drugs gangs, most of which have been played out in the city’s marginalized local authority estates such as Moyross, St. Mary’s Park, Southill and Ballinacurra Weston. Understandably, a variety of interest groups have expressed concern over the ways in which Limerick generally and marginalized areas in particular have been misrepresented by the mass media
ACCEPTED
Peer reviewed
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8830
Marked
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Citizens, Loopholes and Maternity Tourists: Irish Print Media Framing of the 2004 Citizenship Referendum.
(2006)
Breen, Michael J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin
Citizens, Loopholes and Maternity Tourists: Irish Print Media Framing of the 2004 Citizenship Referendum.
(2006)
Breen, Michael J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/1300
Marked
Mark
Engineering relationships for innovation: concerning the feasibility of public policy interventions to engineer inter-firm
(2005)
Haynes, Amanda
Engineering relationships for innovation: concerning the feasibility of public policy interventions to engineer inter-firm
(2005)
Haynes, Amanda
Abstract:
Regional development literature and policy has, in recent years, increasingly focused upon mechanisms for engendering inter-firm collaboration at a local level. Co-operation and partnership are regarded as key to encouraging endogenous innovation in the regions and thus to promoting balanced regional development. Using interview data from 30 companies located in one Irish regional agglomeration, this paper explores the feasibility of public policy interventions to engender inter-firm collaboration in the private sector. The interview data is used to chart the extensiveness and function of spontaneously forming inter-firm ties within the case-study agglomeration. The preconditions for these ties are explored and the relative attractiveness of local versus extra-local partners is given particular consideration. These issues are drawn together to inform the overall question regarding the potential for public policy to engineer such collaboration.
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3629
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Mark
Explaining EU migrant workers: Irish political interventions
(2016)
Power, Martin J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin
Explaining EU migrant workers: Irish political interventions
(2016)
Power, Martin J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin
Abstract:
Since the expansion of the European Union Ireland has experienced a significant increase in the proportion of immigrants from EU states (Quinn 2010). Between 2002 and 2006 the fastest growing category apart from Irish or UK nationals, were EU nationals (6.6% of the population). Polish nationals numbered 63,300 while the number of Lithuanian nationals was 24,600 (CSO Census 2006). This trend continued in the period to 2009: “Between 2005 and 2009 an average of 44 per cent of the immigration flow and 54 per cent of the non-Irish immigration flow has been made up of nationals of EU States that acceded in 2004 together with Romania and Bulgaria which acceded in 2006” (Quinn 2010, 3). The 2006 Census showed that Dublin South City had the highest concentration of foreign-nationals anywhere in the state, with the figure standing at 18.7% of the total population. Of this figure, 9.3% were EU citizens
ACCEPTED
Peer reviewed
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8843
Marked
Mark
Fear, framing and foreigners: the othering of immigrants in the Irish print media
(2006)
Breen, Michael J.; Devereux, Eoin; Haynes, Amanda
Fear, framing and foreigners: the othering of immigrants in the Irish print media
(2006)
Breen, Michael J.; Devereux, Eoin; Haynes, Amanda
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/1350
Marked
Mark
From the Mouths of Janus: Political Constructions of Transactional EU Migrants in Ireland
(2016)
Power, Martin J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin
From the Mouths of Janus: Political Constructions of Transactional EU Migrants in Ireland
(2016)
Power, Martin J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin
Abstract:
INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH INDICATES that recessionary periods may be accompanied by a decline in the quality of relations between the majority population and migrant groups as the latter are at risk of being scapegoated for the economic downturn. In that context, political leadership on the matter of immigration is of crucial importance, with political parties having a key role to play in framing how the public understand immigration.1 This article is based on research which examined how politicians construct non-Irish EU immigrants to Ireland through an analysis of the content of statements attributed to this group in the print media. The article focuses on those statements relating to welfare and the economy, which were among a larger range of themes identified in the wider study. Our sample of articles demonstrates that representatives on both the left and right of the political spectrum were found to commonly address the issue of immigration as a social problem, whether by contribu...
https://arrow.dit.ie/icr/vol13/iss1/1
Marked
Mark
From the mouths of Janus: political constructions of transnational EU migrants in Ireland
(2012)
Power, Martin J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin
From the mouths of Janus: political constructions of transnational EU migrants in Ireland
(2012)
Power, Martin J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin
Abstract:
International research indicates that recessionary periods may be accompanied by a decline in the quality of relations between the majority population and migrant groups as the latter are at risk of being scapegoated for the economic downturn. In that context, political leadership on the matter of immigration is of crucial importance, with political parties having a key role to play in framing how the public understand immigration.1 This article is based on research which examined how politicians construct non-Irish EU immigrants to Ireland through an analysis of the content of statements attributed to this group in the print media. The article focuses on those statements relating to welfare and the economy, which were among a larger range of themes identified in the wider study. Our sample of articles demonstrates that representatives on both the left and right of the political spectrum were found to commonly address the issue of immigration as a social problem, whether by contribu...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3382
Marked
Mark
Gendered policing and policing gender: The Trans Community and An Garda Síochána
(2018)
Schweppe, Jennifer; Haynes, Amanda
Gendered policing and policing gender: The Trans Community and An Garda Síochána
(2018)
Schweppe, Jennifer; Haynes, Amanda
Abstract:
The relationship between the police service and the communities it serves is vital to an open and functioning democracy. While Ireland’s police force, An Garda Síochána, enjoy very high levels of public confidence overall, these levels of trust are not replicated across all communities within the State. This research, which involved a survey of 61 members of the trans community, as well as three focus groups and four one-on-one interviews with a further 19 trans people, sought to explore and understand the relationship between the trans community and the police in Ireland. It explored both attitudinal and experiential perspectives, and finds that the high levels of public confidence enjoyed by An Garda Síochána generally are not replicated in the trans community.
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/7453
Marked
Mark
Hegemony disguised: how discourse analysis is inadequate in the disclosure of the real locus of social control
(2004)
Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin; Breen, Michael J.
Hegemony disguised: how discourse analysis is inadequate in the disclosure of the real locus of social control
(2004)
Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin; Breen, Michael J.
Abstract:
The post-modern world is often characterised as being fragmented in a variety of ways. It is clearly a divided and unequal world. It is divided in ideological terms. It is divided in regional terms. It is divided in terms of those who have power and those who have little or no power. Unequal power relationships in terms of class, ethnicity/race and gender, to name but three examples, continue to persist, usually in combination. In postmodernity, the media continue to have a hugely significant role in manufacturing and disseminating dominant and other forms of ideology. Indeed, a critical political economy perspective would suggest that the ongoing processes of conglomeration in terms of media ownership and control have resulted in a narrowing, in ideological terms, of the range of voices and opinions heard and seen in a media setting. Against this point of view is a perspective that celebrates the power of audiences to resist and subvert the ideological content of media texts. Never...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3633
Marked
Mark
Hegemony Disguised: How discourse analysis is inadequate in the disclosure of the real locus of social control.
(2004)
Breen, Michael J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin
Hegemony Disguised: How discourse analysis is inadequate in the disclosure of the real locus of social control.
(2004)
Breen, Michael J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/1837
Marked
Mark
How Irish politicians construct transnational EU migrants
(2010)
Haynes, Amanda; Power, Martin J.; Devereux, Eoin
How Irish politicians construct transnational EU migrants
(2010)
Haynes, Amanda; Power, Martin J.; Devereux, Eoin
Abstract:
This research study examines the manner in which politicians construct non-Irish EU immigrants to Ireland by analysing the content of statements attributed to this group in the print media. The decision to examine politicians’ statements made through the print media, rather than through government or party press releases was informed by a desire to analyse those statements which are most accessible to the public and therefore most likely to influence public opinion.
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/2635
Marked
Mark
In support of disciplinarity in teaching sociology: reflections from Ireland
(2017)
Haynes, Amanda
In support of disciplinarity in teaching sociology: reflections from Ireland
(2017)
Haynes, Amanda
Abstract:
This article argues for the importance of disciplinarity in the education of novice sociologists and considers the impact of the European Higher Education Area (EHEA) on opportunities for undergraduate students to achieve a command of the discipline. The promotion of modularization and generic skills integral to establishing the EHEA can be understood as incrementally undermining disciplinarity. Moreover, values enshrined in the EHEA specifically disadvantage sociological disciplinarity by promoting service to the market over mastery of a discipline. This article presents the Republic of Ireland as an example of a national context in which sociology is most commonly taught within multidisciplinary degree programs and argues that the Irish experience may be portentous of more global trends, linking the structural position of sociology in Ireland to the wider European policy context. Finally, the article explores ways in which sociologists teaching in such contexts can nonetheless pro...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/7077
Marked
Mark
In the know? Media, migration and public beliefs
(2009)
Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin; Breen, Michael J.
In the know? Media, migration and public beliefs
(2009)
Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin; Breen, Michael J.
Abstract:
Given our wider concerns as to the degree to which the mainstream mass media in Ireland constitutes a public sphere, we have undertaken our analysis in the context of the longstanding debates within media and communication studies focused on how media content shapes public perceptions and beliefs about socially contentious issues. This article presents an analysis of data regarding people’s knowledge of and beliefs about migration into the Republic of Ireland. The data in question has been generated through an intervieweradministered survey conducted with participants primarily in the west, mid-west and south of the country. The findings address such topical issues as common knowledge and popular beliefs regarding: numbers and nationalities entering Ireland; reasons for inward migration; welfare entitlements of asylum seekers and people’s perceptions about the relative ease with which diverse groups integrate. Our findings will be interpreted taking into account participants’ age, e...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/4871
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Mark
In the know? media, migration and public beliefs
(2009)
Devereux, Eoin; Breen, Michael J.; Haynes, Amanda
In the know? media, migration and public beliefs
(2009)
Devereux, Eoin; Breen, Michael J.; Haynes, Amanda
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/1299
Marked
Mark
Indelible stain: territorial stigmatization and the limits of resistance
(2020)
Power, Martin J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin
Indelible stain: territorial stigmatization and the limits of resistance
(2020)
Power, Martin J.; Haynes, Amanda; Devereux, Eoin
Abstract:
The full text of this article will not be available in ULIR until the embargo expires on the 23/09/2022
This article examines the impact of territorial stigma in Limerick, a peripheral Irish city, and whether such stigma can be successfully resisted. It begins by exploring the development of the concept of territorial stigma and its five key characteristics. We reflect on how stigmatization has impacted communities in this city. We then utilize Katz’s (2004) three dimensions of resistance—resistance (denoting an ‘oppositional consciousness’), resilience (denoting coping with life under territorial stigma) and reworking (denoting the recasting of the objects of stigmatization through alternative interpretations) to make sense of how stigmatized identities are being challenged/erased/masked in the context of a top-down ‘rebranding’ of Limerick City. Ultimately the article argues that the capacity of grassroots resistance alone to alter discourses, which although locally focused ar...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/9380
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Mark
Introduction (Vol.2, Iss.2)
(2010)
Barnes, Cliona; Haynes, Amanda; Power, Martin J.; Neville, Patricia; Hannan, Carmel; O’...
Introduction (Vol.2, Iss.2)
(2010)
Barnes, Cliona; Haynes, Amanda; Power, Martin J.; Neville, Patricia; Hannan, Carmel; O’Flynn, Micheal; O’Dwyer, Maria; Ryan, Kathryn
Abstract:
Twelve months ago we launched the inaugural edition of Socheolas - The Limerick Student Journal of Sociology. The second edition followed within six months and we are delighted now to present the third edition of Socheolas, featuring six new articles by undergraduate students of Sociology at the University of Limerick. This edition again offers wide ranging critical discussion of key questions by student contributors. Topics addressed include the ongoing relevance of Marxist theory; critical evaluations of the welfare state; institutional racism in Irish society; critical analysis of digital technologies and two unique approaches to Irish identities, which are explored though discussion of hybridity, diaspora and symbolic ritual
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/7969
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Introduction (Vol.4, Iss.2)
(2012)
Power, Martin J.; Haynes, Amanda
Introduction (Vol.4, Iss.2)
(2012)
Power, Martin J.; Haynes, Amanda
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8022
Marked
Mark
Ireland and our LGBT Community
(2019)
Haynes, Amanda; Schweppe, Jennifer
Ireland and our LGBT Community
(2019)
Haynes, Amanda; Schweppe, Jennifer
Abstract:
Basic figures: – A large majority of respondents agreed or strongly agreed that gay men and lesbians (88%), bisexual people (87%) and transgender people (85%) “should be free to live their own life as they wish”. – Women were significantly more likely than men to agree with the above statement in respect to every identity group. People aged 25-34 years were significantly more likely than the general population to disagree with the statement. – On average, respondents were comfortable having people with a minority sexual orientation or gender identity as neighbours. Responses were significantly more positive towards having lesbians (M=8.51), bisexual people (M=8.40) and gay men (M=8.38) as neighbours compared to transgender people (M=7.98). – High levels of empathy were expressed with crime victims across all identity categories. Respondents were similarly empathetic towards heterosexual couples (M= 9.01), lesbian couples (M=9.05) and transgender persons (M=8.86) who are physic...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8065
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