Stephen Baker
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House training the paramilitaries
The media and the propaganda of peace
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Media visions of a pacified, domesticated Northern Ireland may seem preferable to those of interminable conflict between unionism and nationalism. In the 1970s and 1980s government policy sought to criminalise paramilitary violence and empty it of political content. Censorship and propaganda were key functions of this policy and had a deadening impact on how the media were able to report the conflict. The confidential telephone service was set up by the Northern Ireland Office (NIO) in the 1970s to appeal for anonymous information from the public regarding paramilitary activity. Film and television drama also responded to the new circumstances of the peace process with their own revisions of the conflict narrative. As a BBC Northern Ireland production the programme has wider implications for the way in which public service broadcasting has handled the conflict.

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Northern Ireland after the troubles

A society in transition

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