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PATTERSON, HENRY (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   122222


Provisional IRA, the Irish border, and Anglo-Irish relations du / Patterson, Henry   Journal Article
Patterson, Henry Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Using hitherto largely unexplored governmental archives from London and Dublin, this article focuses on the security challenges arising from the existence of the land frontier between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland and the significance of issues of cross-border security cooperation for Anglo-Irish relations from the beginning of the Troubles until the Anglo-Irish Agreement in 1985. It argues that the relatively safe haven of the Republic was essential to the longevity of the IRA's campaign and that successive Irish governments exploited British security concerns to expand their political influence on Northern Ireland.
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2
ID:   105988


Response to Robert W. White, provisional IRA attacks on the UDR: implications for the study of political violence and terrorism / Patterson, Henry   Journal Article
Patterson, Henry Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
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3
ID:   097175


Sectarianism revisited: the provisional IRA campaign in a border region of Northern Ireland / Patterson, Henry   Journal Article
Patterson, Henry Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract This article revisits the debate, hosted by this journal in the 1990s, on whether the Provisional IRA campaign was sectarian. In the light of current debates about how Northern Ireland deals with its past, it challenges the analysis that emphasises the non-sectarian ideology of republicanism and ignores the effects of IRA violence. It uses research on the IRA campaign in Fermanagh and south Tyrone to argue that the campaign was unavoidably sectarian but rejects current attempts to label it a form of "ethnic cleansing."
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4
ID:   112069


Unionism after good friday and St Andrews / Patterson, Henry   Journal Article
Patterson, Henry Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Unionism's response to the peace process and the Belfast Agreement was often characterised as incoherent, divided and reactive. This reflected the reality that the core of the peace process was the relationship between the British state and the IRA. Since the end of the IRA as a terrorist organisation and mainstream republicanism's embrace of a partitionist settlement, Unionism's political position appears stronger. However, although constitutionally secure it faces major ideological and strategic challenges
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