Coakley, JohnJohnCoakley2010-07-192010-07-19The author20041649-0304http://hdl.handle.net/10197/2193Revised version of a paper presented at the seminar of the Palestinian Academic Association for the Study of International Affairs, Ramallah, 10-14 October 2004.Although the partition of Ireland in 1921 was only one of several in which this strategy was adopted as Britain withdrew politically from territories formerly under its rule, it was marked by a number of distinctive features. This paper examines and seeks to interpret some of these features. It begins by looking at the roots of partition in the history of Ireland’s long political relationship with Great Britain, and explores the emergence of partition as a major question in the early twentieth century. Following a general assessment of the impact of partition on the two parts of Ireland, it turns to the manner in which partition survived as a political issue up to 1998. Some brief remarks comparing the Irish with the Palestinian experience are made in conclusion.186128 bytesapplication/pdfenEthnic conflictPartitionIrelandPalestine1921Great BritainEthnic conflict--IrelandIreland--History--Partition, 1921Ireland--Relations--Great BritainGreat Britain--Relations--IrelandEthnic conflict and the two-state solution : the Irish experience of partitionWorking Paperhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/1.0/