Polarisation and inequality: peace in Northern Ireland
Knox C.
2025Cambridge University Press
Journal of Social Policy
2025
This paper examines why, some 25 years beyond the Belfast-Good Friday Agreement, Northern Ireland (NI) remains a highly polarised society despite the return of devolution (in February 2024) after a 2-year hiatus. Using the theoretical lens of social capital, it draws on the Northern Ireland Life and Times survey and the World Values survey (the latter conducted for the first time in NI) to examine levels of trust as a pre-requisite to reconciliation between the two main communities. The research finds a high degree of trust towards people of another religion and limited affective polarisation across the main political parties. Yet government community relations policies appear to have had limited impact over time and may contribute to bad social capital through bonding within communities at the expense of the other. The paper considers tackling social and economic inequalities, common to both communities, as a means of bridging social capital.
inequality , Northern Ireland , polarisation , segregation , social capital
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Nazarbayev University, Astana, Kazakhstan
Ulster University, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
Nazarbayev University
Ulster University
10 лет помогаем публиковать статьи Международный издатель
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