Jason Knirck
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Decolonising the state
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Once the Anglo-Irish Treaty was passed, the pro-Treatyites had to set up a functioning democratic state. In this, they were influenced by a variety of competing factors. They valued multiparty democracy, but also were used to a politics that worked through a single party speaking for an allegedly monolithic nation. They also valued the creation of a Gaelic state: a new Irish way of organising a state and a society that broke with British models in crucial ways. In particular, they wanted to set up a state that avoided the conflicts inherent in the British two-party system. Throughout 1922, there were attempts to set up a democratic state but also repeated calls for a politics that minimised conflict. Throughout the year, politicians debated the founding principles of the new state, from theories of representation to the characteristics of an ideal representative.

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Democracy and dissent in the Irish Free State

Opposition, decolonisation, and majority rights

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