Nationalism and Multiculturalism Introduction
Nationalism and Multiculturalism Introduction
Nationalism and Multiculturalism Introduction
Multiculturalism
Irish Identity, Citizenship and the Peace
Process
edited by
ANDREW R. FINLAY
1
Following a ruling by the Supreme Court in January 2003, the
Irish Minister for Justice sought to deport the ‘non-national’ parents
of children who were entitled to citizenship by virtue of their birth on
Irish soil. The Justice Minister subsequently announced a referendum
seeking to qualify the entitlement of any one born on the island to
Irish citizenship, including the children of non-nationals, which was,
he said, an unintended consequence of the rewriting of Article 2 of
the constitution as part of the GFA (The Irish Times 18/3/04).
Introduction 5
2
Cf. Wievorka (1995: 3) ‘It can be argued that it is social scientists in
their anxiety to use categories and sub-divisions, and by presenting
“race” as a category have contributed a great deal to the invention
of racism, and to its formulation as doctrine and scholarly theory’.
Introduction 7
I wish that this were true. As I have noted, item 1(v) of the
GFA talks about ‘the people of Northern Ireland … in the
diversity of their traditions’, but parity of esteem is
reserved for ‘the identity and ethos’ of only two
communities’ (1998: 2).
Since the Agreement was signed, the hypnotic trance of
mongoose and cobra seems to have deepened. This alone
is enough to force a re-assessment of the old agenda, but
equally important to that reassessment is the new agenda
that is now being opened up. The form of pluralism that
emerges from the old agenda is a liberal pluralism that
owes much to liberal multicultural thinking elsewhere but,
despite what Logue says, it remains resolutely bicultural in
the way that it privileges the rights of two indigenous
communities, each of which is presumed to have its own
cultural identity, conceived in essentialist terms. If the
existence of other indigenous groups, such as Travellers, is
barely registered let alone acknowledged in the
biculturalism that emerges from the old agenda, what are
the prospects for immigrants and those who are
increasingly referred to as ‘non-nationals’?
Farrell Corcoran has suggested that Irish attempts to ad-
just to the arrival of immigrants are ‘uniquely influenced
by the winding-down of “the Troubles” and the search for
political initiatives designed finally to deal with the legacy
of the colonial past in Northern Ireland’ (2000: 28). Each of
the contributors to this volume would share something
with Corcoran’s assessment; beyond that the views differ.
The purpose of the book is not to develop a consensus, but
to present a range of views from both sides of the border,
and from different disciplinary perspectives.
In the penultimate chapter, Michael Cronin is hopeful
that the intellectual and practical efforts that were
expended in working through the old pluralist agenda
might be useful in the context of the new agenda. In Part
One of the book Maurna Crozier (Chapter Two) and Louis
de Paor (Chapter Three) suggest that the cultural policies
that have been developed to contest sectarianism in
Northern Ireland might also prove useful in contesting
Introduction 26
REFERENCES