Jim Smyth
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The glacier moves?
Economic change and class structure
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This chapter argues that the over-determination of the political in the arena of class formation and reproduction in Northern Ireland has lost most of its previous salience. Enforced political realignments were compounded by economic change. The research on Northern Ireland focuses overwhelmingly on the causes and consequences of ethno-religious differences and the resultant conflict. The risk of poverty and social exclusion remains higher in Northern Ireland than in Britain or the Irish Republic. Regional economic changes in the 1980s and 1990s, which culminated in rising employment and decreasing unemployment, brought with them alterations in Northern Ireland's social structure and the extent and nature of social disadvantage. Changes in employment patterns have reflected the economic developments. In the 1990s the Northern Ireland economy experienced what appeared to be a fundamental turn-round in fortunes.

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Northern Ireland after the troubles

A society in transition

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