Travail écrit : "Stormont's ugly scaffolding : How the Northern Irish political institutions reinforce "green and orange"voting."
Mc Ardle, Eoghan
Promotor(s) : Pomarède, Julien
Date of defense : 17-Aug-2023/31-Aug-2023 • Permalink : http://hdl.handle.net/2268.2/18570
Details
Title : | Travail écrit : "Stormont's ugly scaffolding : How the Northern Irish political institutions reinforce "green and orange"voting." |
Author : | Mc Ardle, Eoghan |
Date of defense : | 17-Aug-2023/31-Aug-2023 |
Advisor(s) : | Pomarède, Julien |
Committee's member(s) : | Renard, Juliette
Gérard, Nelly |
Language : | English |
Number of pages : | 54 (excl. appendices), 108 (incl. appendices) |
Discipline(s) : | Law, criminology & political science > Political science, public administration & international relations |
Institution(s) : | Université de Liège, Liège, Belgique |
Degree: | Master en sciences politiques, orientation générale |
Faculty: | Master thesis of the Faculté de Droit, de Science Politique et de Criminologie |
Abstract
[en] This paper examines the reasons as to why the electorate of Northern Ireland continues to vote
by their constitutional preference (for the state to remain a constituent country of the United
Kingdom or as part of a unified Ireland with the Republic of Ireland). By speaking to academics
knowledgeable in the field of Northern Ireland politics and political representatives of parties
present in the Northern Irish government at Stormont, this research discovers that Northern
Irish voters continue to vote by constitutional preference both as a result of the consociational
setup of government, and a lack of party-political engagement across the divide with voters of
other identities. What results is a political structure wherein voting behaviour remains heavily
embedded within the political socialisation related to the voters’ community background.
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