Multiculturalism and sectarianism in post-agreement Northern Ireland
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Abstract
This dissertation contributes to existing scholarship on contemporary
multiculturalism. It does so by exploring how multicultural agendas are
operationalised in Northern Ireland – a society divided along sectarian lines. As the
political violence of the conflict has receded, Northern Ireland has witnessed
unprecedented levels of in-migration. This dissertation seeks to understand how, as
Northern Irish society is increasingly being conceived of as culturally diverse,
emerging multicultural agendas interact with embedded sectarianism. The empirical
research focuses on the political institutions and policies pertaining to Northern
Ireland as a whole, and the specific activities and social practices of various
ethnically-identified minorities, voluntary organisations and anti-racist movements in
selected areas of Belfast. The research involved interviews with civil servants, policy
makers, ethnically-identified minorities, voluntary groups and anti-racist activists.
This dissertation argues that a government concern for managing cultural diversity
can be understood as part of a process of ‘normalising’ Northern Ireland after the
conflict. However, a persistent sectarianism complicates, and often impedes, the
advancement of multicultural, and particularly anti-racist, agendas. This argument is
developed through an exploration of policy and institutional structures, anti-racist
campaigns and responses to racialised violence, as well as initiatives that seek to
recognise and celebrate cultural diversity. This dissertation shows that the
relationship between sectarianism and multiculturalism in post-Agreement Northern
Ireland is not unidirectional. Instead, the two processes are deeply imbricated with
each other: multicultural initiatives are shaped by sectarianism, and sectarianism
persists in emergent multicultural imaginaries. This said, the dissertation suggests
that multiculturalism is also capable of disrupting sectarian constructions of space
and identity in Northern Ireland. Based on these findings, this dissertation argues that
cultural diversity provides an opportunity to denaturalise the social structures and
narratives which reproduce sectarianism. It is argued that this process could play an
important role in advancing the construction of a socially cohesive and multicultural
Northern Ireland.
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