Module Code: POU33032
Module Name: Irish Politics B 2024-25
- ECTS Weighting: 5
- Semester/Term Taught: Semester 2
- Contact Hours: Two 1-hour lectures per week; one 1-hour tutorial per fortnight
- Module Personnel: Dr Lisa Keenan
Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of this module, students will:
- have an enhanced understanding of the Irish governmental system
- be familiar with academic research into Irish politics
- have gained an understanding of the origins of, central issues in, and interpretations of ‘the Northern Ireland problem’
- have been encouraged, and ideally have learned, to critically assess the material they encounter
Module Learning Aims
The aim of this module is to deepen students’ understanding not only of the substance of Irish politics, north and south, but also of the academic research that aims to interpret and understand it.
Module Content
The module covers the Irish governmental system, and politics in Northern Ireland. Topics include, policy-making in Ireland, loyalism, and options for Northern Ireland in the future.
Visiting students
This module is OPEN to one-term and full-year visiting students. However, visiting students should bear in mind that this module is not designed as a beginners' guide to Irish Politics or as the equivalent of a summer school course, and that those with little or no prior knowledge of the subject will need to do some initial catching up on the basics. Bear in mind too that many aspects of the politics of the Republic of Ireland were covered in the first term in module POU33021. Reading chapter 1 of the module textbook (Politics in the Republic of Ireland, see below) in advance of term or early in the term is recommended for those with little background knowledge of Irish history. A useful and fairly introductory overview of the country, designed mainly for visiting students, is Eoin O'Malley, Contemporary Ireland (Palgrave Macmillan, 2011). Incoming Socrates / Erasmus / visiting students are required to fulfil the same module requirements, in terms of coursework and exams, as TCD students. Registering for the module implies acceptance of this.
Recommended Reading List
Coakley, J., & Gallagher, M. (Eds.). (2017). Politics in the Republic of Ireland. Routledge..
O'Malley, E. (2017). Contemporary Ireland. Bloomsbury Publishing. This is a general and lively introduction to Ireland, including history and society as well as politics. It is recommended reading for visiting students.Tonge, J. (2005). The New Northern Irish Politics?. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan
Assessment Details
- Short paper: 15%
- Essay: 25%
- Examination in person: 60%