On Monday (Jan. 11), the and the 听at the听University of Notre Dame鈥檚 are launching the , an initiative that brings together leading experts from Ireland and abroad to consider the most challenging policy issues now being debated throughout the island of Ireland.
ARINS, or Analysing and Researching Ireland North and South, is being launched against the backdrop of Brexit, the United Kingdom鈥檚 withdrawal from the European Union, which took full effect on Jan. 1. Brexit has created both a sense of urgency and opportunity regarding relationships within Ireland and between the Irish Republic and the United Kingdom.
Research questions to be explored as part of the ARINS Project range from constitutional and institutional issues to options for economic, fiscal and social policy. Relations within Northern Ireland, across the island of Ireland, and between Ireland and Britain will all be assessed.
鈥淲hile the issue of a future referendum on the constitutional position of Ireland has been raised, holding a referendum in the absence of prior research and informed debate on the options and their consequences would be most unfortunate,鈥 said Gerry McKenna, senior vice president of the Royal Irish Academy, an all-Ireland, leading body of experts in the sciences and humanities. 鈥淭he academy recognizes the sensitivities around the very process of conducting such research, but also believes that the need to ensure that all eventualities are anticipated and researched, and that ensuing debate is informed and comprehensive, takes primacy.鈥
This new partnership enables the RIA and Keough-Naughton Institute to jointly conduct and commission rigorous, nonpartisan and independent research by a wide range of scholars in multiple disciplines. In publishing and publicizing that research, the goal is to support respectful debate among politicians, within the media and civil society, and among the general public.
鈥淩esearch on these matters is not intended to strengthen or weaken any particular aspiration, but rather to foster meaningful debate,鈥 said , the Madden-Hennebry Professor of History and director of the Keough-Naughton Institute for Irish 91视频. 鈥Irrespective of how constitutional questions might develop, it is also essential to understand how the Good Friday/Belfast Agreement and its institutions might be affected by the uncertainties of this moment. As part of this exercise, it is critical to map interdependencies and connections within and between Northern Ireland, Ireland and the United Kingdom.鈥
Papers will be published monthly in the Irish 91视频 in International Affairs journal edited by John Doyle, director of the Institute for International Conflict Resolution and Reconstruction at Dublin City University. All articles will be free to access online at . Each article published will be accompanied by at least one response, often from a different standpoint. Forthcoming articles include Jennifer Todd, University College Dublin, on Unionism, identity and Irish unity; Deirdre Heenan, Ulster University, on cross-border cooperation on health issues; Duncan Morrow, Ulster University, on Unionist responses to the new debate on constitutional futures; Rory Montgomery, a former Irish diplomat, on the Good Friday/Belfast Agreement and a united Ireland; and Katy Hayward, Queen鈥檚 University Belfast, on Brexit and the Northern Ireland protocol. Climate policy in the two jurisdictions has also been identified for detailed research and analysis.
Other experts contributing to the ARINS project include Alan Barrett, Economic and Social Research Institute; Marie Cowan, Geological Survey of Northern Ireland; Etain Tannam, Trinity College Dublin; Cathy Gormley-Heenan, Ulster University; and Christopher McCrudden, Queen鈥檚 University Belfast.听
On Jan. 11, the听Irish Times听and the听Belfast Telegraph听will publish opposing viewpoints from听Brendan O鈥橪eary, University of Pennsylvania,听and Peter Shirlow, University of Liverpool,听on whether the Irish should prepare for a referendum on unification.
At 7 p.m. local time that day, Fintan O鈥橳oole, an Irish Times columnist, and William Crawley, a BBC commentator, will have an online public conversation on the theme 鈥淣orthern Ireland after Brexit.鈥 Tickets are free of charge but booking is essential at
The Royal Irish Academy discourse program is sponsored by Mason Hayes & Curran.
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Contact: Mary Hendriksen, assistant director, Keough-Naughton Institute for Irish 91视频, mhendrik@nd.edu