Creating a space for cooperation: Soft spaces, spatial planning and cross-border cooperation on the island of Ireland

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenKapitelbegutachtet

Standard

Creating a space for cooperation: Soft spaces, spatial planning and cross-border cooperation on the island of Ireland. / Walsh, Cormac.
Soft Spaces in Europe: Re-Negotiating Governance, Boundaries and Borders. Hrsg. / Phil Allmendinger; Graham Haughton; Jörg Knieling; Frank Othengrafen. Taylor and Francis Inc., 2015. S. 192-212.

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenKapitelbegutachtet

Harvard

Walsh, C 2015, Creating a space for cooperation: Soft spaces, spatial planning and cross-border cooperation on the island of Ireland. in P Allmendinger, G Haughton, J Knieling & F Othengrafen (Hrsg.), Soft Spaces in Europe: Re-Negotiating Governance, Boundaries and Borders. Taylor and Francis Inc., S. 192-212. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315768403

APA

Walsh, C. (2015). Creating a space for cooperation: Soft spaces, spatial planning and cross-border cooperation on the island of Ireland. In P. Allmendinger, G. Haughton, J. Knieling, & F. Othengrafen (Hrsg.), Soft Spaces in Europe: Re-Negotiating Governance, Boundaries and Borders (S. 192-212). Taylor and Francis Inc.. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315768403

Vancouver

Walsh C. Creating a space for cooperation: Soft spaces, spatial planning and cross-border cooperation on the island of Ireland. in Allmendinger P, Haughton G, Knieling J, Othengrafen F, Hrsg., Soft Spaces in Europe: Re-Negotiating Governance, Boundaries and Borders. Taylor and Francis Inc. 2015. S. 192-212 doi: 10.4324/9781315768403

Bibtex

@inbook{0099a0ee16eb48eeb52168af979ae711,
title = "Creating a space for cooperation: Soft spaces, spatial planning and cross-border cooperation on the island of Ireland",
abstract = "Politically, the island of Ireland is divided between two territorial jurisdictions, the Republic of Ireland in the South and Northern Ireland in the North. Northern Ireland (NI) is part of the United Kingdom while the Republic of Ireland (RoI) has independent status as a unitary parliamentary republic. Both jurisdictions lie within the European Union. The population of NI is approximately 1.8 million (3% of the total population of the UK) whereas the population of RoI is approximately 4.6 million. The partition of the island dates from 1922. Between the late 1960s and the late 1990s, NI was marked by armed conflict between republican and loyalist paramilitaries. While republicans sought a united Ireland, with one jurisdiction for the whole island, loyalists sought to maintain NI{\textquoteright}s existing status as a region or province within the United Kingdom. Loyalists drew support from the Protestant, unionist2 majority; the republicans from the nationalist Catholic minority. In this context, NI has developed a distinct {\textquoteleft}political consciousness{\textquoteright} characterised by {\textquoteleft}ethno-national domination and resistance{\textquoteright} and a mentality of competing, mutually incompatible territorial claims and socio-spatial imaginaries (O{\textquoteright}Dowd and McCall, 2008: 86; McCall, 2011).",
keywords = "Geography, Environmental planning",
author = "Cormac Walsh",
year = "2015",
month = may,
day = "1",
doi = "10.4324/9781315768403",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781138783980",
pages = "192--212",
editor = "Phil Allmendinger and Graham Haughton and J{\"o}rg Knieling and Frank Othengrafen",
booktitle = "Soft Spaces in Europe",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis Inc.",
address = "United States",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Creating a space for cooperation

T2 - Soft spaces, spatial planning and cross-border cooperation on the island of Ireland

AU - Walsh, Cormac

PY - 2015/5/1

Y1 - 2015/5/1

N2 - Politically, the island of Ireland is divided between two territorial jurisdictions, the Republic of Ireland in the South and Northern Ireland in the North. Northern Ireland (NI) is part of the United Kingdom while the Republic of Ireland (RoI) has independent status as a unitary parliamentary republic. Both jurisdictions lie within the European Union. The population of NI is approximately 1.8 million (3% of the total population of the UK) whereas the population of RoI is approximately 4.6 million. The partition of the island dates from 1922. Between the late 1960s and the late 1990s, NI was marked by armed conflict between republican and loyalist paramilitaries. While republicans sought a united Ireland, with one jurisdiction for the whole island, loyalists sought to maintain NI’s existing status as a region or province within the United Kingdom. Loyalists drew support from the Protestant, unionist2 majority; the republicans from the nationalist Catholic minority. In this context, NI has developed a distinct ‘political consciousness’ characterised by ‘ethno-national domination and resistance’ and a mentality of competing, mutually incompatible territorial claims and socio-spatial imaginaries (O’Dowd and McCall, 2008: 86; McCall, 2011).

AB - Politically, the island of Ireland is divided between two territorial jurisdictions, the Republic of Ireland in the South and Northern Ireland in the North. Northern Ireland (NI) is part of the United Kingdom while the Republic of Ireland (RoI) has independent status as a unitary parliamentary republic. Both jurisdictions lie within the European Union. The population of NI is approximately 1.8 million (3% of the total population of the UK) whereas the population of RoI is approximately 4.6 million. The partition of the island dates from 1922. Between the late 1960s and the late 1990s, NI was marked by armed conflict between republican and loyalist paramilitaries. While republicans sought a united Ireland, with one jurisdiction for the whole island, loyalists sought to maintain NI’s existing status as a region or province within the United Kingdom. Loyalists drew support from the Protestant, unionist2 majority; the republicans from the nationalist Catholic minority. In this context, NI has developed a distinct ‘political consciousness’ characterised by ‘ethno-national domination and resistance’ and a mentality of competing, mutually incompatible territorial claims and socio-spatial imaginaries (O’Dowd and McCall, 2008: 86; McCall, 2011).

KW - Geography

KW - Environmental planning

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84942941998&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.4324/9781315768403

DO - 10.4324/9781315768403

M3 - Chapter

AN - SCOPUS:84942941998

SN - 9781138783980

SP - 192

EP - 212

BT - Soft Spaces in Europe

A2 - Allmendinger, Phil

A2 - Haughton, Graham

A2 - Knieling, Jörg

A2 - Othengrafen, Frank

PB - Taylor and Francis Inc.

ER -

Links

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. Disciplines and Doubts
  2. Decision Support System
  3. Putting sustainable campuses into force
  4. Variable annuities and the option to seek risk
  5. Swarm Robotics, or: The Smartness of 'a bunch of cheap dumb things'
  6. Effectiveness and Moderators of an Internet-Based Mobile-Supported Stress Management Intervention as a Universal Prevention Approach
  7. Internationale Berichtssysteme
  8. From railroad imperialism to neoliberal reprimarization: Lessons from regime-shifts in the Global Soybean Complex
  9. One Size fits None
  10. Ein un(mögliches) Programm
  11. To separate or not to separate: what is necessary and enough for a green and sustainable extraction of bioactive compounds from Brazilian citrus waste
  12. Self-regulatory thought across time and domains
  13. Internationaler Masterstudiengang 'Sustainable Development and Management'
  14. Coauthoring collaborative strategy when voices are many and authority is ambiguous
  15. Inheriting Cosmopolitics
  16. Fertilized graminoids intensify negative drought effects on grassland productivity
  17. Blockchain for the Circular Economy: Analysis of the Research-Practice Gap
  18. Assisted colonization is a techno-fix
  19. The Epistemology of Management: An Introduction
  20. Minimal conditions of motor inductions of approach-avoidance states
  21. § 1 Einleitung
  22. Identifying governance gaps among interlinked sustainability challenges
  23. Capacity building for transformational leadership and transdisciplinarity
  24. Towards a future conceptualization of destination resilience
  25. Saproxylic beetle assemblages of three managed oak woodlands in the Eastern Mediterranean