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BRITISH - IRISH COOPERATION (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   111678


European Union and conflict resolution: northern Ireland, Cyprus and bilateral cooperation / Tannam, Etain   Journal Article
Tannam, Etain Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract The aim of this article is to determine the EU's effect on British-Irish and Greek-Turkish cooperation. It examines the EU's actual and potential role in fostering British-Irish and Greek-Turkish cooperation as well as its policies to Northern Ireland and Cyprus themselves. Domestic bureaucratic capacity and institutional design are put forward as explanations for the success of the British-Irish relationship rather than EU membership per se. In the case of Cyprus, the article suggests that increased bilateral cooperation with respect to disputed territory is unlikely to occur in the absence of faster bureaucratic change in both Greece and Turkey. EU membership is not a causal factor in the evolution of cooperation and conflict resolution.
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2
ID:   105645


Explaining British-Irish cooperation / Tannam, Etain   Journal Article
Tannam, Etain Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract This article applies rational institutionalism, to the case of the British-Irish relationship. Hypotheses are drawn about the role of institutions in advancing cooperation. In section two an overview and analysis of British-Irish agreements and policymaking processes are provided. In section three, the role of institution-building in causing British-Irish cooperation is highlighted. In conclusion, the enduring relevance of rational institutionalism to the British-Irish case is highlighted and its potential to understand conflict in the 21st century is stressed.
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