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Did (and does) the Irish border matter?
Author(s)
Date Issued
2006
Date Available
2010-07-20T13:35:56Z
Abstract
This paper examines how the two parts of Ireland were affected by the partition of the country in 1922. It examines the post-partition evolution of living standards north and south, and patterns of trade, migration, and road and rail traffic between the two since 1922. A separate section looks at the effects of living near the border on population trends. Bearing in mind the difficulty of establishing a relevant counterfactual— what would have happened in the absence of partition—we conclude that while it is possible to discern a “partition effect”, it is smaller and less significant than is widely perceived. The evidence we present is a salutary warning against great expectations about the possible economic gains from the dismantling the barriers erected between the two parts of Ireland after 1922.
Sponsorship
Higher Education Authority
Type of Material
Working Paper
Publisher
University College Dublin. Institute for British-Irish Studies
Series
IBIS Working Papers
60
MFPP Working Papers
10
Copyright (Published Version)
The authors, 2006
Subject – LCSH
Ireland--History--Partition, 1921
Borderlands--Ireland
Borderlands--Northern Ireland
Ireland--Boundaries--Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland--Boundaries--Ireland
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
Conference Details
Revised version of a paper presented at final conference of the Mapping frontiers, plotting pathways: routes to North-South cooperation in a divided island programme, City Hotel, Armagh, 19-20 January 2006.
ISSN
1649-0304
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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60_ogw.pdf
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242.09 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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