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Displaying Results 126 - 150 of 33245 on page 6 of 1330
Marked
Mark
'Taking Responsibility for the abortion issue: thoughts on legislative reform in the aftermath of A, B and C’.
(2011)
Schweppe, Jennifer
'Taking Responsibility for the abortion issue: thoughts on legislative reform in the aftermath of A, B and C’.
(2011)
Schweppe, Jennifer
Abstract:
Discusses the issue of abortion in Ireland following the European Court of Human Rights decision in A v Ireland (25579/05) and suggests that Ireland is under an obligation to introduce legislation which reconciles the right to life of the unborn and that of the mother. Considers, using the salient principles explored in the Irish Supreme Court ruling in Attorney General v X, some of the issues that future legislation should address, namely: (1) in what circumstances is a woman entitled to an abortion, (2) the rights of the parents of a pregnant girl; and (3) the obligations of the medial profession.
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3223
Marked
Mark
'The Background to the Arrest of the Fifth Earl of Kildare and Sir Christopher Preston in 1418: A Missing Membrane'
(2008)
CROOKS, PETER
'The Background to the Arrest of the Fifth Earl of Kildare and Sir Christopher Preston in 1418: A Missing Membrane'
(2008)
CROOKS, PETER
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/79427
Marked
Mark
'The best banned in the land': censorship and Irish writing since 1950
(2005)
Ó Drisceoil, Donal
'The best banned in the land': censorship and Irish writing since 1950
(2005)
Ó Drisceoil, Donal
Abstract:
This article examines the censorship of Irish writing since 1950. It gives an historical overview of the evolution of literary censorship in twentieth-century Ireland, with particular reference to the operations of the Censorship of Publications Acts, 1929 and 1946. It includes a list of books by Irish authors that were banned since 1950; an account of the supplanting of the Catholic activists who had controlled the Censorship of Publications Board since its inception; the fundamental reforms introduced in 1967; and an account and analysis of the impact of censorship on Irish writing and Irish writers, and the variety of their responses.
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/733
Marked
Mark
'The Character of Editress': Marian Evans at the Westminster Review, 1851-54
(2011)
Dillane, Fionnuala
'The Character of Editress': Marian Evans at the Westminster Review, 1851-54
(2011)
Dillane, Fionnuala
Abstract:
That Marian Evans was a professional journalist familiar with the world of publishing by the time she wrote her first fiction is acknowledged universally in critical and biographical accounts of George Eliot’s life. She was, after all, the first woman editor of a leading intellectual quarterly, the Westminster Review. However, little attention has been paid to the actual details of Evans’s editorial work, carried out a decade before the George Eliot persona was invented. This essay argues that Evans’s editorial career provides revealing evidence of an important intervention in the haphazard processes of the professionalization of Victorian women. The 'Character of Editress,' to use Evans’s own expression, signifies both the performance and the mask that were required of a woman occupying such a public, professional role at a prominent mid-century journal. This “character” emerges from the margins of publication history when the focus of attention shifts from the content of...
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/8066
Marked
Mark
'The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing', Vols 4 and 5, and the Invention of Medieval Women
(2003)
Johnston, Elva
'The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing', Vols 4 and 5, and the Invention of Medieval Women
(2003)
Johnston, Elva
Abstract:
My focus will be on the first part of Volume IV, ‘Medieval to Modern, 600–1900’ (pp.1–457), especially on the sections dealing with early medieval Ireland. These contributions, and some relevant texts elsewhere, make up a relatively small proportion of the two volumes. Taken as a unit, however, they are the largest modern collection of early medieval texts in translation relating to Irish women. As such they are important: they present a substantial body of material together and in accessible format for the first time.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/8297
Marked
Mark
'The future isn't what it used to be': Technology in counselling and psychotherapy
(2008)
RICHARDS, DEREK
'The future isn't what it used to be': Technology in counselling and psychotherapy
(2008)
RICHARDS, DEREK
Abstract:
Change is prefigured in the articulation by Dr Rick Satavas: `the future isn?t what it used to be?. Its sentiment rings true; recently psychotherapy practitioners and researchers have begun investigating the potential of engaging new technologies, such as the internet and software programs to deliver psychological interventions (Ritterband et al, 2003). Quite a bit of work has already been done and this paper will give an overview. The paper addresses the reasons for innovation and discusses the more salient advantages and disadvantages of engaging technology. In particular the paper will focus on online counselling. Lastly, the therapeutic relationship online will be considered.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/33108
Marked
Mark
'The Last Kulak' and other stories of post-privatization life in Chukotka’s tundra
(2006)
Gray, Patty A.
'The Last Kulak' and other stories of post-privatization life in Chukotka’s tundra
(2006)
Gray, Patty A.
Abstract:
The Chukchis and Evens of western Chukotka led a nomadic or semi-nomadic way of life for hundreds of years, until mid-twentieth century campaigns by the Soviet state for the most part settled them in permanent villages.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/2027/
Marked
Mark
'The Last Kulak' and other stories of post-privatization life in Chukotka’s tundra
(2006)
Gray, Patty A.
'The Last Kulak' and other stories of post-privatization life in Chukotka’s tundra
(2006)
Gray, Patty A.
Abstract:
The Chukchis and Evens of western Chukotka led a nomadic or semi-nomadic way of life for hundreds of years, until mid-twentieth century campaigns by the Soviet state for the most part settled them in permanent villages.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/1243/
Marked
Mark
'The law touches us but here and there, and now and then' : Edmund Burke, law, and legal theory
(2012)
Donlan, Seán Patrick
'The law touches us but here and there, and now and then' : Edmund Burke, law, and legal theory
(2012)
Donlan, Seán Patrick
Abstract:
Edmund Burke’s training in, knowledge of, and appreciation for, law is generally recognised. Indeed, as RB McDowell has written, while Burke may, during short bouts of irritation, have impulsively expressed intense exasperation with lawyers, their practices, procedures and prejudices, [but he] nevertheless remained convinced that the law, with all its limitations, must be regarded with reverence and that lawyers, with all their faults, performed functions of the utmost value to the community.
PUBLISHED
Not peer reviewed
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/4479
Marked
Mark
'The more we stand for-the more we fight for': compatibility and legitimacy in the effects of multiple social identities
(2017)
Chayinska, Maria; Minescu, Anca; McCarty, Graig
'The more we stand for-the more we fight for': compatibility and legitimacy in the effects of multiple social identities
(2017)
Chayinska, Maria; Minescu, Anca; McCarty, Graig
Abstract:
This paper explores the expression of multiple social identities through coordinated collective action. We propose that perceived compatibility between potentially contrasting identities and perceived legitimacy of protest serve as catalysts for collective action. The present paper maps the context of the “Euromaidan” anti-regime protests in Ukraine and reports data (N = 996) collected through an online survey following legislation to ban protests (March–May, 2014). We measured participants’ identification with three different groups (the Ukrainian nation, the online protest community, and the street movement), perception of compatibility between online protest and the street movement, perception of the legitimacy of protest, and intentions to take persuasive and confrontational collective action. We found evidence that the more social groups people “stood for,” the more they “fought” for their cause and that identifications predicted both forms of collective action to the degree th...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/5812
Marked
Mark
'The problem of Trinity College Dublin': a historical perspective on rationalisation in higher education in Ireland'.
(2013)
WALSH, JOHN
'The problem of Trinity College Dublin': a historical perspective on rationalisation in higher education in Ireland'.
(2013)
WALSH, JOHN
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/68224
Marked
Mark
'The Spirituality of the Vocation to Priesthood'
(2006)
Leahy, Brendan
'The Spirituality of the Vocation to Priesthood'
(2006)
Leahy, Brendan
Abstract:
Examining key elements in the spirituality of the vocation to ministerial priesthood, this article offers a meditative reading of some of the relevant main biblical texts. It indicates Mary as the model of the common priesthood on the basis of which ministerial priesthood is exercised. The second part of the article outlines some of specific aspects of the spirituality of the ministerial priestly vocation
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/543/
Marked
Mark
'The Taming of the Amazon: Pentesilie in Ulrich von Turheim's "Rennewart" '
(2008)
Politis, Cordula
'The Taming of the Amazon: Pentesilie in Ulrich von Turheim's "Rennewart" '
(2008)
Politis, Cordula
Abstract:
IV In his investigation of origin myths Patrick Geary makes the point that the Amazons' 'defeat or destruction marks the beginning or reconstitution of the proper order of the world'.35 Geary states that the literary representation of Amazons may imply two kinds of criticism: women in arms could be intended as evidence of male failure to rule properly, but they could also, in the Christian tradition, be read as a symptom of paganism.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/5570/
Marked
Mark
'The UN "Beijing Platform for Action" 1995-2005: Local Global Political Spaces, NGO Advocacy, and Governmental Responses in the Republic of Ireland',
(2011)
Reilly, Niamh
'The UN "Beijing Platform for Action" 1995-2005: Local Global Political Spaces, NGO Advocacy, and Governmental Responses in the Republic of Ireland',
(2011)
Reilly, Niamh
Abstract:
Introduction September 2005 marks the tenth anniversary of the Fourth World Conference on Women (Beijing 1995) and the adoption of the Beijing Platform for Action (BPFA) by 189 governments, including Ireland. From February 28th to March 11th, 2005, Irish governmental and non-governmental organisation (NGO) delegations attended a meeting of the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) in New York, which aimed to carry out a 'review and appraisal' of implementation of the BPFA. At this timely juncture, this report reviews the domestic impact in the Republic of Ireland -- with a focus on NGO activism and governmental responses -- of the Fourth World Conference on Women (FWCW) and subsequent BPFA implementation monitoring processes. I start with a brief overview of the 'Beijing to Beijing-Plus-Ten' path in global perspective. I then highlight key developments in NGO and governmental engagement with the BPFA and its review processes in Ireland. In doing ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/2124
Marked
Mark
'The whole nation is listening to you': the presentation of the self on a tabloid talk radio show
(2005)
O'Sullivan, Sara
'The whole nation is listening to you': the presentation of the self on a tabloid talk radio show
(2005)
O'Sullivan, Sara
Abstract:
This article focuses on callers' experiences of participating on a tabloid talk radio show. The performative dimension of calling was found to be central. This is an aspect of participation on talk radio shows that has been largely neglected by previous studies. Callers have concerns about how they manage their self-presentation on-air. They are aware of both the host and the listening audience, and try to control the impression they 'give off'. Callers to The Gerry Ryan Show are central players who, together with the host and the production team, contribute to the staging of debate in this on-air forum. Concerns about performance were found to be secondary for those who rang the show with a problem. These callers tended to prioritise instrumental goals such as problem-solving or support-seeking.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/4293
Marked
Mark
'There isn't Anything like a GAL': The Guardian ad litem Service in Ireland
(2010)
McWilliams, Ann; Hamilton, Claire
'There isn't Anything like a GAL': The Guardian ad litem Service in Ireland
(2010)
McWilliams, Ann; Hamilton, Claire
Abstract:
This article examines the role of the guardian ad litem service in Ireland within the context of public law proceedings. In the first part, the role of the guardian ad litem in Irish courts is outlined and this is followed by a discussion of the broader legal context informing the right of children to be heard in Irish courts. The article discusses some of the concerns about the lack of statutory regulation, standards and structure in the Irish guardian ad litem system. The tension inherent in expressing the wishes and views of children while making recommendations regarding their welfare and best interests is also considered. The article concludes with the view that giving children a statutory right to be heard which is not supported with adequate resources and proper frameworks is of limited value.
http://arrow.dit.ie/ijass/vol10/iss1/5
Marked
Mark
'There Was Never Really Any Question of Anything Else': Young People's Agency, Institutional Habitus and the Transition to Higher Education
(2012)
SMYTH, EMER; BANKS, JOANNE
'There Was Never Really Any Question of Anything Else': Young People's Agency, Institutional Habitus and the Transition to Higher Education
(2012)
SMYTH, EMER; BANKS, JOANNE
Abstract:
International research into educational decision-making has been extensive, focusing on the way in which young people and their families assess the different options open to them. However, to what extent can we assume that different groups of young people have equal access to the information needed to make such an assessment? And what role, if any, do schools play in this process? Using in-depth qualitative interviews from two schools with very different student intakes, this paper examines the key influences which shape young people?s choices. Decisions about whether to go on to higher education are found to reflect three sets of processes: individual habitus; the institutional habitus of the school, as reflected in the amount and type of guidance provided; and young people?s own agency, namely, the conscious process whereby students seek out information on different options and evaluate these alternatives.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/67341
Marked
Mark
'They are waiting for you to take the stage, Mr Scientist
(2015)
ROCHE, JOSEPH
'They are waiting for you to take the stage, Mr Scientist
(2015)
ROCHE, JOSEPH
Abstract:
Scientists feel a lot more comfortable in their laboratory than they do on a stage in front of thousands of people. This is true of every scientist I know and it is certainly true of me. We are even further from our comfort zone when we are carrying out scientific experiments on that stage and trying to ?wow ?the audience with our craft. Earlier this year, I was standing in front of 1900 expectant faces for the tenth time in three days, at the BT Young Scientist and Technology Exhibition in Dublin, hoping not to accidentally set myself on fire or spill liquid nitrogen everywhere, and I found myself thinking back to how I had managed to end up in a science show.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/76102
Marked
Mark
'They can't wipe us out, they can't lick us. We'll go on forever pa, because we're the people' - Misrepresenting death in Jim Sheridan's In America (2003)
(2010)
Crosson, Seán
'They can't wipe us out, they can't lick us. We'll go on forever pa, because we're the people' - Misrepresenting death in Jim Sheridan's In America (2003)
(2010)
Crosson, Seán
Abstract:
This paper will examine the recurring theme of death in Jim Sheridan's work, with particular focus on his 2003 film In America. This theme also links Sheridan's work to one of his favourite directors, John Ford, whose work In America alludes to. While exploring the theme of death in Sheridan's films, and how it connects with the work of Ford, this paper will consider responses to In America, the first film to be (partly) shot in New York after the attack on the twin towers, in light of the tragedy of 9/11. It raises questions about the problematic positioning of this film by Sheridan and others not just with respect to the events of that day but also in relation to the 1981 hunger strikes in Northern Ireland. Furthermore, it questions the regressive politics involved in the depiction of the central black character in In America, Mateo, particularly as it relates to this theme of death.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/590
Marked
Mark
'Third Way' Urban policy and the new moral politics of community: A comparative analysis of Ballymum in Dublin and the Gorbals of Glasgow'
(2006)
Boyle, Mark
'Third Way' Urban policy and the new moral politics of community: A comparative analysis of Ballymum in Dublin and the Gorbals of Glasgow'
(2006)
Boyle, Mark
Abstract:
While the United Kingdom’s emerging brand of Third Way Urban Policy (TWUP) often associates itself with a kind of anarchic vision of self-regulating and self-reproducing local communities, it can in fact be thought of as a thinly veiled moral crusade against vulnerable residents living in deprived neighborhoods. Indeed TWUP might be best conceived as a “flanking support” for the neoliberal turn in urban governance in British cities; morally commendable communities are defined as those who can reattach themselves to the “mainstream” and stand on their own two feet within the terms set by neoliberal market economics. When these morally charged interventions fail to connect locally, they have the potential to stir conflict over who has the authority to judge forms of community life. Mapping and accounting for the uneven development of moral conflicts over community is therefore a pressing concern. To this end, this paper presents a comparative analysis of the different ways in which mo...
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/8700/
Marked
Mark
'Thou shalt not plagiarise’: from self-reported views to recognition and avoidance of plagiarism
(2013)
Risquez, Angelica; O'Dwyer, Michelle; Ledwith, Ann
'Thou shalt not plagiarise’: from self-reported views to recognition and avoidance of plagiarism
(2013)
Risquez, Angelica; O'Dwyer, Michelle; Ledwith, Ann
Abstract:
Throughout much of the literature on plagiarism in higher education, there is an implicit assumption that students who understand plagiarism, who have high ethical views and declare not to engage in plagiaristic behaviour are able to recognise it and avoid it in practice. Challenging this supposition, this paper contrasts students’ self-reported data with their ability to recognise and avoid 10 plagiarism in a proposed case scenario. A questionnaire was adapted from previous literature and administered to a sample of undergraduate first- and secondyear university students in an Irish university. Results show that self-reported measures are not a powerful predictor of the students’ ability to recognise the practical case as an academic breach, nor to avoid the breach through referenc- 15 ing. This suggests that students’ understanding and awareness of academic breaches would benefit from experiential learning and that higher education institutions should not merely rely on providing ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/5245
Marked
Mark
'Til death do us part' : surviving spouses, civil partners & provision on intestacy in Ireland
(2016)
O'Sullivan, Kathryn
'Til death do us part' : surviving spouses, civil partners & provision on intestacy in Ireland
(2016)
O'Sullivan, Kathryn
Abstract:
The Succession Act 1965 brought, it was said, a revolutionary change in the law of succession to Ireland (Re Urquhart [1974] IR 197 at 208). However, despite the enormous impact it has had on citizens, in the fifty years since its enactment, the Act has never been subject to a comprehensive review or reform. This lack of legislative engagement in Ireland stands in marked contrast to a number of other common law jurisdictions. In the past decade alone, the Law Commission for England and Wales (2011), the Scottish Law Commission (2009), the New South Wales Law Reform Commission (2007) and the British Columbia Law Institute (2006) have each placed their respective succession law regimes under the microscope. Responding to this gap in the literature, this article considers the extent to which surviving spouses or civil partners are adequately protected on intestacy, specifically, in Ireland. Highlighting the potentially serious shortcomings of the Irish fr...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/5097
Marked
Mark
'To Live the Life of the Trinity - The Eucharistic Invitation'
(2005)
Leahy, Brendan
'To Live the Life of the Trinity - The Eucharistic Invitation'
(2005)
Leahy, Brendan
Abstract:
This article is a reflection on the Eucharist in terms of the contemporary rediscovery in theology of the triune face of God. It takes as its starting point some comments made by Pope Benedict XVI regarding the contemporary search for the true face of God.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/542/
Marked
Mark
'Towards a lasting peace'?: the Northern Ireland multi-party agreement, referendum and Assembly elections of 1998
(1998)
Doyle, John
'Towards a lasting peace'?: the Northern Ireland multi-party agreement, referendum and Assembly elections of 1998
(1998)
Doyle, John
Abstract:
The agreement signed by the Irish and British governments and most of the political parties in Northern Ireland on 10th April 1998 (Good Friday) was a truly historic step. The agreement itself marks the most significant shift in party political positions since the partition of Ireland. This, coupled with the fact that the agreement is open-ended, and indeed under its provisions must develop beyond what is already agreed to survive means that an analysis of the evolution of party political attitudes which led to this agreement is essential in order to understand its significance. The following article gives a brief summary of the key provisions of the agreement, analyses the processes which led the different parties towards a position where agreement was possible and examines the referenda which ratified the agreement North and South and election results to the new Northern Ireland Assembly - the public's first opportunities to pass judgement on the efforts of their politicians.
http://doras.dcu.ie/531/
Marked
Mark
'Towards a Theorisation of the Historical Geography of Nationalism in Diasporas: The Irish Diaspora as Exemplar'
(2001)
Boyle, Mark
'Towards a Theorisation of the Historical Geography of Nationalism in Diasporas: The Irish Diaspora as Exemplar'
(2001)
Boyle, Mark
Abstract:
The strength of diasporic nationalism is characterised by an uneven historical geography, with different diasporic communities functioning as ‘hotbeds’ of nationalism at different times. Mapping and explaining these historical geographies is of importance if the cultural and political experiences of diasporic existence are to be understood. It is towards a critical interrogation of the conceptual tools available to accomplish this task that this paper is dedicated. Based upon a reading of social scientific literature on the intensity of national affiliation among the nineteenth and early twentieth century Irish diaspora, and using Doreen Massey's recent advocacy of a new concept of ‘space–time’, the paper advances a case for a (re)theorisation of the phenomenon of diasporic nationalism. In so doing, it is hoped that it will contribute to ongoing efforts to (re)theorise migration in four main ways: firstly, by identifying a subject area that provides a forum for population geogr...
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/8703/
Displaying Results 126 - 150 of 33245 on page 6 of 1330
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All Ireland Public Health R... (155)
Connacht-Ulster Alliance (112)
Dublin City University (1499)
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