TY - JOUR
T1 - Civil society, social movements and the Irish state
AU - Kirby, Peadar
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright Irish Journal of Sociology.
PY - 2010/11/1
Y1 - 2010/11/1
N2 - This article develops a theoretical framework to consider the symbiotic relationship between civil society, social movements and the Irish state. Civil society, largely through social movements, laid the foundations for an independent Irish state in the half-century before independence. Following independence, the nature of the civil society-state relationship changed; civil society became much more dependent on the state. The article empirically traces the nature of society’s relationship to the state since the 1920s, and examines the nature of the political system and its major political party, Fianna Fáil, the structure of the economy, and the dominance of particular understandings of the role of civil society and the nature of society itself. The period since the advent of social partnership in 1987 is examined; this period marks a new attempt by the state to co-opt organised civil society making it subservient to its project of the imposition on society of the requirements of global corporate profit-making. The more forceful implementation of a global free-market project by the Irish state since the 1980s, and the co-option of organised civil society into this project, has left huge space for an alternative to emerge, the potential of which was indicated by the success of the ‘No’ campaign in the 2008 Lisbon referendum campaign.
AB - This article develops a theoretical framework to consider the symbiotic relationship between civil society, social movements and the Irish state. Civil society, largely through social movements, laid the foundations for an independent Irish state in the half-century before independence. Following independence, the nature of the civil society-state relationship changed; civil society became much more dependent on the state. The article empirically traces the nature of society’s relationship to the state since the 1920s, and examines the nature of the political system and its major political party, Fianna Fáil, the structure of the economy, and the dominance of particular understandings of the role of civil society and the nature of society itself. The period since the advent of social partnership in 1987 is examined; this period marks a new attempt by the state to co-opt organised civil society making it subservient to its project of the imposition on society of the requirements of global corporate profit-making. The more forceful implementation of a global free-market project by the Irish state since the 1980s, and the co-option of organised civil society into this project, has left huge space for an alternative to emerge, the potential of which was indicated by the success of the ‘No’ campaign in the 2008 Lisbon referendum campaign.
KW - Civil society
KW - Independence
KW - Movements
KW - State
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84921057825&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.7227/IJS.18.2.2
DO - 10.7227/IJS.18.2.2
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84921057825
SN - 0791-6035
VL - 18
SP - 1
EP - 21
JO - Irish Journal of Sociology
JF - Irish Journal of Sociology
IS - 2
ER -