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Subject = celtic tiger;
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Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 47 on page 1 of 2
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‘After the Celtic Tiger’, Irish Social Science Platform Conference
(2008)
Kenny, Michael; McDonnell, Alice; McCabe, Fintan
‘After the Celtic Tiger’, Irish Social Science Platform Conference
(2008)
Kenny, Michael; McDonnell, Alice; McCabe, Fintan
Abstract:
The four National University of Ireland Universities have offered a diploma in rural development to adults experienced in, or concerned about rural development since 1996. The diploma initiative arose from a government report on the needs for education and training for the development of rural areas. The universities acted upon the Creedon Report (1993) and offered a 60 credit two-year distance learning diploma in 11 separate themed modules. Over 400 people have completed this diploma since 1996 and have gone on to impact on their local communities, develop careers, develop enterprises, and impact on rural development policy. By 2004 the universities were able to launch a follow on degree. This degree completed by distance learning in two years, (following the diploma), has graduated almost 80 people in the last four years. This paper draws on research completed by two graduates of this degree. These graduates, with support from a summer research programme within NUI Maynooth, soug...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/1116/
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‘Leaving Dublin’: Photographic portrayals of post-Celtic Tiger emigration – a sociological analysis
(2018)
Gray, Breda
‘Leaving Dublin’: Photographic portrayals of post-Celtic Tiger emigration – a sociological analysis
(2018)
Gray, Breda
Abstract:
.This article analyses David Monahan’s photographic portrait series of over 120 people before emigrating from post-Celtic Tiger Ireland, entitled ‘Leaving Dublin’. As a digital series that circulates across multiple media channels, it moves beyond the tradition of documentary photography into a more hybrid aesthetic, political and media environment. As well as inserting these images in multiple circulatory platforms and replicable formats, the series disrupts the dominant visual culture of emigration by expressively recasting how it is seen and thought. This article argues that the highly stylised and unsentimental aesthetic adopted by Monahan pushes the images beyond the established visual culture of sentimental departure, visualising instead transnational and multicultural histories and politics through complex circuits of migration. As such, it highlights what Mieke Bal sees as the instability of migratory culture in the city landscape. At the same time, however, it re-enacts par...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/7557
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‘Smart, clued-in guys’: Irish rugby players as sporting celebrities in post-Celtic Tiger Irish media (Pre-published version)
(2018)
Free, Marcus
‘Smart, clued-in guys’: Irish rugby players as sporting celebrities in post-Celtic Tiger Irish media (Pre-published version)
(2018)
Free, Marcus
Abstract:
‘Smart, clued-in guys’: Irish rugby players as sporting celebrities in post-Celtic Tiger Irish media.
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2465
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A booming country- a booming countryside? The Celtic Tiger phenomenon and the consequences for rural areas
(2017)
Cawley, Mary
A booming country- a booming countryside? The Celtic Tiger phenomenon and the consequences for rural areas
(2017)
Cawley, Mary
Abstract:
[No abstract available]
Peer reviewed
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/6317
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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
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All-consuming images: new gender formations in post-Celtic-Tiger Ireland
(2009)
Ging, Debbie
All-consuming images: new gender formations in post-Celtic-Tiger Ireland
(2009)
Ging, Debbie
http://doras.dcu.ie/4545/
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Busy Ireland
(2008)
O'Carroll, Aileen
Busy Ireland
(2008)
O'Carroll, Aileen
Abstract:
Abstract included in text.
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/3542/
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Dance-work: Images of organization in Irish dance
(2008)
Kavanagh, Donncha; Kuhling, Carmen; Keohane, Kieran
Dance-work: Images of organization in Irish dance
(2008)
Kavanagh, Donncha; Kuhling, Carmen; Keohane, Kieran
Abstract:
The Irish economic boom, commonly known as the Celtic Tiger, provides an interesting and unique opportunity to explore the relationship between the profound shifts in the organization of working life and in the production and consumption of culture. In this paper, we confine our inquiry into the relationship with one aspect of popular culture, namely dance, focusing on the phenomenon of Riverdance which emerged contemporaneously with the Celtic Tiger. We argue that both are deeply immersed in larger organizing discourses, historical narratives about national identity and civilizing attempts to control the body. We identify three distinct 'moments' in the development of Irish dance, which we label as pre-national, 'Traditional' Ireland; national, 'Modern', Parochial Ireland and global, 'Post-modern' Ireland. This provides a narrative through which we explore the transformation of working relations in Ireland during the 19th and 20th centuries.
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/209
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Divided City: the Geography of Post-Celtic Tiger Limerick
(2011)
McCafferty, Des
Divided City: the Geography of Post-Celtic Tiger Limerick
(2011)
McCafferty, Des
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/1856
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Economic Recession as a Catalyst to Increased Collaboration in Rural Tourism
(2015)
Gorman, Catherine; Mottiar, Ziene
Economic Recession as a Catalyst to Increased Collaboration in Rural Tourism
(2015)
Gorman, Catherine; Mottiar, Ziene
Abstract:
Purpose: This chapter illustrates the collaborative strategies used by a rural village and community to counteract the rapid decline in economic and social activity in tourism that occurred during and after the recession in Ireland. Design/methodology/approach: A review of literature focuses on collaborative strategies evident within a rural context, and considers benefits, challenges, inter and intra- relationships including ties, structure and communication. Motivational factors relating to social and economic need are also discussed. The case study is set in context with a brief review of the Irish economic environment, rural policy and rural tourism. Findings: In a community rich in tourism resources, the economic recession provided an impetus to collaborate, pulling the community and resources together with a view to re-invigorating a tourist destination. Present goals of the collaborative process include the need to regain economic residential value, employment, pride of place...
https://arrow.dit.ie/tfschhmtbook/38
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Exploring the 'Celtic Tiger' Phenomenon: Causes and Consequences of Ireland's Economic Miracle
(1998)
Breathnach, Proinnsias
Exploring the 'Celtic Tiger' Phenomenon: Causes and Consequences of Ireland's Economic Miracle
(1998)
Breathnach, Proinnsias
Abstract:
The economy of the Republic of Ireland has experienced continuously high growth rates in the 1990’s, after a period of severe difficulty in the previous decade. As a result, Ireland is now within sight of exceeding average EU living standards, a situation which would reverse Ireland’s traditional status as a peripheral European economy. The main purpose of this article is to examine the factors which have contributed to this apparent economic miracle, which has earned Ireland the ‘Celtic Tiger’ appellation. Particular importance is attached to the role of inward investment, which has grown in quantity and changed in quality in the last decade. These changes are attributed to general developments in the locational behaviour of transnational corporations, especially the need for access to skilled workers in an increasingly high-tech age. Such workers have become readily available in Ireland due to demographic change and state investment in education. However, while foreign branc...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/3086/
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Fair City? Planning challenges in post-crisis Dublin
(2017)
Moore-Cherry, Niamh; Tomaney, John
Fair City? Planning challenges in post-crisis Dublin
(2017)
Moore-Cherry, Niamh; Tomaney, John
Abstract:
In an era when, we are told, cities are now the source of economic dynamism and the focus for innovations in public policy and governance across the world, Ireland presents an anomaly. This was made apparent by the recent rejection of an attempt to introduce a directly elected mayor for Dublin at a time when mayors are lauded as the solution to manifold social and economic problems. However, when we delve a little deeper, that decision is perhaps unsurprising given the traditional ambivalence in Ireland towards the ‘urban’.
Visiting Professor Seed Funding Scheme, University College Dublin
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/8653
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Foreword by Professor Dermot McAleese on the occasion of his presidential address
(1998)
McAleese, Dermot
Foreword by Professor Dermot McAleese on the occasion of his presidential address
(1998)
McAleese, Dermot
Abstract:
This is a good year to be celebrating the 150th anniversary of our Society! The Irish economy continues to boom and prospects remain bright. At first many were sceptical about the Celtic Tiger (as Morgan Stanley christened it). Was it all skin and no substance? But, as record after record has been broken, the sceptics have been silenced. The statistics show GNP growth averaging over 8 per cent since 1994. Between 1994 and 1999, real GNP is projected to increase by two-thirds. Growth in numbers employed has reached unprecedented rates, the national finances are regaining health, the balance of payments remains positive, and inflation remains relatively dormant. In a landmark judgement, the Department of Finance recently declared itself ?comfortable? with the economy?s performance and the public finances. And to cap all this good news on the economic front, we have the suspension of violence in Northern Ireland.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/8658
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From Boom to Bust: a Post-Celtic Tiger analysis of the Norms, Values and Roles of Irish Financial Journalists
(2016)
Fahy, Declan; O'Brien, Mark; Poti, Valerio
From Boom to Bust: a Post-Celtic Tiger analysis of the Norms, Values and Roles of Irish Financial Journalists
(2016)
Fahy, Declan; O'Brien, Mark; Poti, Valerio
Abstract:
The collapse of Ireland's economy into its worst recession in modern history has prompted some professional reflection about the roles and responsibilities of the country’s financial journalists. Conor Brady, a former editor of the Irish Times, asked in a commentary article published in his former paper: ‘Was the forming of this crisis reportable earlier? Were emerging trends apparent? Did they [the news media] do as good a job as they might have in flagging the approaching storm?’ Brady, editor of the paper between 1986 and 2002, the period corresponding to the rise of the Celtic Tiger economy, concluded that criticisms of the systemic problems in the financial system were articulated by some figures in key positions in Irish society, but were not reported in the news media ‘in a form that was sufficiently sustained, coherent and authoritative’.
https://arrow.dit.ie/icr/vol12/iss1/1
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From Boom to Bust: a Post-Celtic Tiger Analysis of the Norms, Values and Roles of Irish Financial Journalists
(2016)
Fahy, Declan; O'Brien, Mark; Poti, Valerio
From Boom to Bust: a Post-Celtic Tiger Analysis of the Norms, Values and Roles of Irish Financial Journalists
(2016)
Fahy, Declan; O'Brien, Mark; Poti, Valerio
Abstract:
The collapse of Ireland's economy into its worst recession in modern history has prompted some professional reflection about the roles and responsibilities of the country’s financial journalists. Conor Brady, a former editor of the Irish Times, asked in a commentary article published in his former paper: ‘Was the forming of this crisis reportable earlier? Were emerging trends apparent? Did they [the news media] do as good a job as they might have in flagging the approaching storm?’ Brady, editor of the paper between 1986 and 2002, the period corresponding to the rise of the Celtic Tiger economy, concluded that criticisms of the systemic problems in the financial system were articulated by some figures in key positions in Irish society, but were not reported in the news media ‘in a form that was sufficiently sustained, coherent and authoritative’.
https://arrow.dit.ie/icr/vol11/iss1/4
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From exclusion to inclusion? Reflections on the Celtic tiger
(2009)
Adshead, Maura; McInerney, Chris
From exclusion to inclusion? Reflections on the Celtic tiger
(2009)
Adshead, Maura; McInerney, Chris
Abstract:
International (Considine & Giguere 2008) and Australian (Smyth, Reddel & Jones 2005) interest in the place of associations and partnerships to create more inclusive governance forms continues unabated. In this paper we trace the evolution of Irish partnership approaches by providing a brief summary of ‘flagship’ partnership initiatives and the primary influences that led to their creation. In doing so, we note that there were a variety of external and internal impetuses towards partnership— at European, national and sub-national levels of government—which manifested themselves in different partnership projects at these different levels. As a result, despite sharing many common attitudes and approaches, these partnership initiatives inevitably reflected different policy aims and ambitions. The consequences for changes to Irish governmental systems were twofold. On the one hand, the fact that partnership was simultaneously promoted in a variety of government levels and policy ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3222
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Internal Communication in Ireland Before and During the Economic Recession from the Perspective of Communication Practice, Technology, and Ethics
(2012)
O'Murchú, Laoise
Internal Communication in Ireland Before and During the Economic Recession from the Perspective of Communication Practice, Technology, and Ethics
(2012)
O'Murchú, Laoise
Abstract:
Internal communication in Ireland from the ‘celtic tiger’ era through to the economicrecession from the perspective of: communication practice, technology and ethics.This thesis examines the practice of internal communication in Irish public andprivate sector organisations during 2007/8 and 2010. This period spans the end ofIreland’s ‘celtic tiger’ economy and the development of a major recession. All thecase study organisations have been affected by the credit crunch and are experiencingeconomic, financial and ethical challenges.The practices of internal communication in Ireland has evaded in depth academicexamination in communications literature. Therefore, the contribution to knowledgein this work is the clarification of the internal communication practices in Ireland andalso the illumination of the changes in internal communication practices during thisturbulent economic period. It provides insights into how internal communicationpractices deal with changes in organisational str...
https://arrow.dit.ie/appadoc/33
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Ireland and Ecocriticism: An Introduction
(2013)
Flannery, Eoin
Ireland and Ecocriticism: An Introduction
(2013)
Flannery, Eoin
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2192
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Ireland in the Eye of the Tiger
(2002)
Maher, Eamon
Ireland in the Eye of the Tiger
(2002)
Maher, Eamon
Abstract:
Reproduced by kind permission of Reality
https://arrow.dit.ie/ittbus/56
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Ireland, Empire and Utopia: Irish Postcolonial Criticism and the Utopian Impulse
(2010)
Flannery, Eoin
Ireland, Empire and Utopia: Irish Postcolonial Criticism and the Utopian Impulse
(2010)
Flannery, Eoin
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2054
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Ireland's multiple interface-periphery development model: Achievements and limits
(2016)
Ruane, Joseph
Ireland's multiple interface-periphery development model: Achievements and limits
(2016)
Ruane, Joseph
Abstract:
Globalisation is a challenge that creates both winners and losers. Until 2008 the small Northern European states were amongst the winners as they adjust well to rapid changes in the international political economy. These countries traditionally stay competitive by balancing open economies and flexible industrial policies within various forms of social partnerships and welfare systems. But what are the factors of their success, what is the significance of the state in a globalised economy, how do we explain the differentiated effects - and what has happened after the recent economic decline?
University College Cork. College of Arts and Celtic Studes
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/8002
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Ireland’s Sovereign Debt Crisis
(2015)
Whelan, Karl
Ireland’s Sovereign Debt Crisis
(2015)
Whelan, Karl
Abstract:
Among the countries currently experiencing sovereign debt crises, Ireland’s case is perhaps the most dramatic. As recently as 2007, Ireland was seen by many as top of the European class in its economic achievements. Ireland had combined a long period of high economic growth and low unemployment with budget surpluses. The country appeared to be well placed to cope with any economic slowdown as it had a gross debt-GDP ratio in 2007 of 25% and a sovereign wealth fund worth about €5000 a head.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/6384
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Irish identity is far from ideal
(2009)
O’Donovan, Fiona
Irish identity is far from ideal
(2009)
O’Donovan, Fiona
Abstract:
This article presents a sociological analysis of current Irish identity using two strands of globalization theory: regressive nationalism and glocalization. It is submitted that Irish society in multicultural, globalized 2009, in the aftermath of the Celtic Tiger and the economic crisis lacks an appropriate sociological "ideal" which Emile Durkheim considers necessary for societal self-reflection. It applies this originally religion orientated theory of “ideals” to identity analysis, arguing that the extremely diverging "ideals" by which Irish people currently struggle to identify themselves - The Irish Paddy and the Irish Cosmopolitan - are both detached from the reality of current Irish identity which is reconstructing itself through a hybrid process of regressive glocalization, negotiating the impact of globalization to preserve the ‘old Irish spirit’. It is therefore proposed that a new "ideal" of Irish identity should be constructed around Irish re...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/7954
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New business formation in a rapidly growing economy: the Irish experience
(2011)
Anyadike-Danes, Michael; Hart, Mark; Lenihan, Helena
New business formation in a rapidly growing economy: the Irish experience
(2011)
Anyadike-Danes, Michael; Hart, Mark; Lenihan, Helena
Abstract:
The extraordinary growth of the Irish economy since the mid-1990s - the 'Celtic Tiger' - has attracted a great deal of interest, commentary and research. Indeed, many countries look to Ireland as an economic development role model, and it has been suggested that Ireland might provide key lessons for other EU members as they seek to achieve the objectives set out in the Lisbon Agenda. Much of the discussion of Ireland's growth has focused on its possible triggers: the long term consequences of the late 1980s fiscal stabilisation; EU structural funds; education; wage moderation; and devaluation of the Irish punt. The industrial policy perspective has highlighted the importance of inflows of foreign direct investment, but a notable absence from the discourse on the 'Celtic Tiger' has been any mention of the role of new business venture creation and entrepreneurship. In this paper we use unpublished Irish VAT data for the years 1988 to 2004 to provide the first ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3131
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Openness and growth: an international perspective
(2001)
Pain, Nigel
Openness and growth: an international perspective
(2001)
Pain, Nigel
Abstract:
International openness via the pursuit of liberal trade and investment policies has become one of the conventional verities of the policy advice handed out by multilateral institutions over the past two decades. Greater international integration is now widely regarded as a pre-requisite for improved economic performance and higher per capita incomes, with the former intellectual consensus that had favoured import-substituting regimes as a means of stimulating industrialisation having been gradually undermined (Kreuger, 1997).
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/8688
Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 47 on page 1 of 2
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Dublin City University (1)
Dublin Institute of Technology (8)
Mary Immaculate College (4)
Maynooth University (4)
NUI Galway (7)
Trinity College Dublin (4)
University College Cork (4)
University College Dublin (7)
University of Limerick (8)
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