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Thresholds of State Change : Changing British State Institutions and Practices in Northern Ireland after Direct Rule
Author(s)
Date Issued
2014-10
Date Available
2015-10-10T03:00:17Z
Abstract
A long process of state-institutional change underlay the eventual swift restructuration of Northern Ireland in the 2000s.This article shows that it took a threshold form. The argument abstracts from the drama of politics within Northern Ireland in order to highlight the intrastate processes that incentivised radical change in parties and paramilitaries there and to contribute to comparative analysis of state change in conflict situations. The concept of a threshold is used in the social sciences to refer to a step or phase in a process of change, one that is difficult to pass but which, once passed, produces swift observable outcomes (Lustick, 1993, 43-46; Pierson, 2004, 83-86). Thresholds are likely to characterise state-change in conflict situations because the intensity of opposing interpretations, the embeddedness of state responses, the urgency of security imperatives and the determination of veto players tend to block incremental forms of change. Ian Lustick (1993, 2001) has argued that in cases of ‘state contraction’ a long slow process of overcoming internal ‘ideological’ and ‘regime’ (military) thresholds precedes a swift process of boundary-change. However there has been little elaboration of these ideas for other conflict situations. This article shows a process of state threshold-crossing which affected sequentially British orientations, prioritisations and policies in Northern Ireland. It uses new evidence in the form of over 70 elite interviews with senior British and Irish politicians and officials who made, influenced and closely observed the process.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
Journal
Political Studies
Volume
62
Issue
3
Start Page
522
End Page
538
Copyright (Published Version)
2013 the Author, Political Studies, Political Studies Association
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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