All Stories

  1. Predictors of Strength of In-Group Identity in Northern Ireland: Impact of Past Sectarian Conflict, Relative Deprivation, and Church Attendance
  2. Trajectories of Adolescent Aggression and Family Cohesion: The Potential to Perpetuate or Ameliorate Political Conflict
  3. Book Review: Britain and Ireland: The End of Ulster Loyalism?
  4. Rejection, Shaming, Enclosure, and Moving On: Variant Experiences and Meaning Among Loyalist Former Prisoners
  5. Northern Ireland: 20 Years After the Cease-Fires
  6. Deference and Indirect Expropriation Analysis in International Investment Law: Observations on Current Approaches and Frameworks for Future Analysis
  7. Political Violence and Adolescent Out-group Attitudes and Prosocial Behaviors: Implications for Positive Inter-group Relations
  8. Les Laboratoires Servier, SAA, and others v Republic of Poland: Defining the Nature of the Police Powers 'Defence' and the Deference Applicable in Regulatory Expropriation Cases
  9. A Social-Ecological, Process-Oriented Perspective on Political Violence and Child Development
  10. Youth in contexts of political violence: A developmental approach to the study of youth identity and emotional security in their communities.
  11. Adolescents’ relationship with God and internalizing adjustment over time: The moderating role of maternal religious coping.
  12. Relations between political violence and child adjustment: A four-wave test of the role of emotional insecurity about community.
  13. Book Review: Britain and Ireland: Abandoning Historical Conflict? Former Political Prisoners and Reconciliation in Northern Ireland
  14. Hate Crime: Record or Perception?
  15. Risk and resilience: The moderating role of social coping for maternal mental health in a setting of political conflict
  16. Longitudinal relations between sectarian and nonsectarian community violence and child adjustment in Northern Ireland
  17. What We Talk About When We Talk About Peace: A Rejoinder to McEvoy and Shirlow
  18. The Protective Role of Group Identity: Sectarian Antisocial Behavior and Adolescent Emotion Problems
  19. Social Identity and Youth Aggressive and Delinquent Behaviors in a Context of Political Violence
  20. The Northern Ireland Peace Process and “Terroristic” Narratives: A Reply to Edwards and McGrattan
  21. Assessing the determinants of public confidence in the police: A case study of a post-conflict community in Northern Ireland
  22. Responsible Participation, Community Engagement and Policing in Transitional Societies: Lessons from a Local Crime Survey in Northern Ireland
  23. Maternal Religiosity, Family Resources and Stressors, and Parent-Child Attachment Security in Northern Ireland
  24. A Prosperity of Thought in an Age of Austerity: The Case of Ulster Loyalism
  25. Political Violence and Child Adjustment: Longitudinal Tests of Sectarian Antisocial Behavior, Family Conflict, and Insecurity as Explanatory Pathways
  26. Adolescents' educational outcomes in a social ecology of parenting, family, and community risks in Northern Ireland
  27. Devolution and the Politics of Development in Northern Ireland
  28. Parenting Control in Contexts of Political Violence: Testing Bidirectional Relations Between Violence Exposure and Control in Post-Accord Belfast
  29. Geographies of Conflict and Post-Conflict in Northern Ireland
  30. Forward to the Past? Loyalist Paramilitarism in Northern Ireland Since 1994
  31. Book Review: PETER SHIRLOW AND KIERON MCEVOY, Beyond The Wire: Former Prisoners and Conflict Transformation in Northern Ireland, London: Pluto Press, 2008, x + 185 pp., ISBN 9780745326313, £16.99 (pbk)
  32. So Why Did the Guns Fall Silent? How Interplay, not Stalemate, Explains the Northern Ireland Peace Process
  33. Social coping mother's mental health in Northern Ireland
  34. Youth Exposure to Sectarian Tension and Aggression Against Out-Group Members: The Role of Social Identity
  35. Sectarian and nonsectarian violence: Mothers' appraisals of political conflict in Northern Ireland.
  36. Associations between mothers' experience with the troubles in Northern Ireland and mothers' and children's psychological functioning: the moderating role of social identity
  37. Longitudinal Pathways Between Political Violence and Child Adjustment: The Role of Emotional Security about the Community in Northern Ireland
  38. Political violence and child adjustment in Northern Ireland: Testing pathways in a social–ecological model including single-and two-parent families.
  39. Abandoning Historical Conflict?
  40. Politically motivated prisoners in Northern Ireland
  41. Introduction
  42. Former prisoners in a global context
  43. Political views and understandings
  44. Imprisonment, ideological development and change
  45. Former prisoners and societal reconstruction
  46. Conclusion
  47. Conflict transformation and changing perceptions of the ‘other’
  48. Political and tactical change among former prisoners
  49. Testing a social ecological model for relations between political violence and child adjustment in Northern Ireland
  50. ‘Wee Women No More’: Female Partners of Republican Political Prisoners in Belfast
  51. Sectarian and Nonsectarian Antisocial Behavior Questionnaire
  52. Conflict, Transformation, and Former Loyalist Paramilitary Prisoners in Northern Ireland
  53. The Geography of Conflict and Death in Belfast, Northern Ireland
  54. Book Review: Peter Shirlow and Kieran McEvoy
  55. Book Review: Beyond the wire: Former prisoners and conflict transformation in Northern Ireland, Peter Shirlow and Kieran McEvoy. London: Pluto Press, 2008. 185 pp. (including bibliography and index). £16.99 (pbk). ISBN 978—0—7453—2631—3
  56. Re-imagining DDR
  57. Key Concepts in Political Geography
  58. Security in the Community Scale
  59. Sectarian and Nonsectarian Antisocial Scales
  60. The differential impact on children of inter- and intra-community violence in Northern Ireland.
  61. Sympathies, apathies and antipathies: the Falls–Shankill Divide
  62. Authenticity and stakeholder planning in the segregated city
  63. Measuring and Mapping Conflict-Related Deaths and Segregation: Lessons from the Belfast ‘Troubles’
  64. Spatial segregation and labour market processes in Belfast
  65. Belfast: The ‘post-conflict’ city
  66. The geography of loyalist paramilitary feuding in Belfast
  67. Measuring Workforce Segregation: Religious Composition of Private-Sector Employees at Individual Sites in Northern Ireland
  68. Devolution and the political representation of business interests in the UK
  69. Shaping childhood risk in post‐conflict rural Northern Ireland
  70. Business representation and the UK regions: mapping institutional change
  71. Capacity-building, Representation and Intracommunity Conflict
  72. RESISTANCE, TRANSITION AND EXCLUSION: POLITICALLY MOTIVATED EX-PRISONERS AND CONFLICT TRANSFORMATION IN NORTHERN IRELAND
  73. ‘Who fears to speak’: Fear, mobility, and ethno‐sectarianism in the two ‘ardoynes’
  74. The geographies and politics of fear
  75. Ethno-sectarianism and the reproduction of fear in Belfast
  76. When leisure turns to fear: fear, mobility, and ethno-sectarianism in Belfast
  77. The Battle of the Somme in Ulster memory and identity
  78. Devolution in Northern Ireland/Ulster/the North/Six Counties: Delete as Appropriate
  79. Fear and Ethnic Division
  80. The Tail of the Tiger: Experiences and perceptions of unemployment and inactivity in Donegal
  81. Northern Ireland Between Peace and War?
  82. ‘Who is going to Toss the Burgers’? Social Class and the Reconstruction of the Northern Irish Economy
  83. Loyalism, Linfield and the territorial politics of soccer fandom in Northern Ireland
  84. On the Margins: Disabled people's experience of employment in Donegal, West Ireland
  85. An elusive agenda: the development of a middle ground in Northern Ireland
  86. Book reviews
  87. People in conflict in place: the case of Northern Ireland
  88. Language, discourse and dialogue: Sinn Fein and the Irish peace process
  89. Book reviews : Shirlow, P., editor, 1995: Development in Ireland: contemporary issues. London: Pluto Press. xvi + 144 pp. £40.00 cloth, £12.95 paper. ISBN: 0 7453 0999 2; 0 7453 0998 4
  90. Sectarianism, Socioeconomic Competition and the Political Economy of Ulster Loyalism
  91. Policy Review Section
  92. Hemodynamic effects of acute loading changes in aortic stenosis therapeutic implications
  93. Caffeine Consumption and Blood Pressure: An Epidemiological Study
  94. Effects of Dietary Sodium Deprivation on Erythrocyte Sodium Concentration and Cation Transport in Normotensive and Untreated Hypertensive Subjects
  95. Letters to the Editor
  96. Governance
  97. Representation
  98. Encumbered by Data: Understanding Politically Motivated Former Prisoners and the Transition to Peace in Northern Ireland
  99. From war to peace: Informalism, restorative justice and conflict transformation in Northern Ireland
  100. Enduring Problems: The Belfast Agreement and a Disagreed Belfast