O'Farrell, OrlaghOrlaghO'FarrellWalsh, JudyJudyWalsh2019-04-242019-04-242017 Europ2017-10-16978-92-79-68839-3http://hdl.handle.net/10197/10117Irish society is quite homogeneous. According to the 2011 census, of a population of 4 588 252, 84% are Roman Catholic, 6% non-religious, 2.8% Church of Ireland (Protestant), 1% Muslim, and the remainder are of various other religions. 85% describe themselves as ‘White Irish’ and 0.6% as Irish Travellers. 58 697 people identify as ‘Black’ or ‘Black Irish’. Between 2006 and 2011 ‘Other White’ (non-Irish) rose by almost 43%, largely due to immigration from Eastern European countries. 595 355 people, approximately 13% of the population, recorded having a disability. No census questions were asked as to sexual orientation but 4 042 cohabiting same-sex couples were recorded. Non-Irish nationals consisted of 544 357 (12% of the population), 386 764 of whom are nationals of another EU Member State.enAge discriminationAnti-discrimination measureDisabilitySexual orientationEqual treatmentEthnic discriminationIrelandNational lawReligious discriminationSexual discriminationSocial policyCountry report: Non-discrimination: Ireland 2017Government Publication10.2838/2020862018-08-16https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/