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Wednesday, Feb 8th 2012


Articles Covering Class

Poverty and Class in Northern Ireland

In 2003 the Bare Necessities report by independent think-tank Democratic Dialogue revealed that nearly 30% of Northern Ireland’s households were poor. According to the report, in 2002-03 half a million people in Northern Ireland were living in poor households of whom148,900 were children (37.4 per cent of all children).According to the report, “based on the [...]

Class Matters: The Recession Diaries - September 29th

What kind of recession are we having - or rather, how is it impacting on different sectors of the labour force? Some time ago we heard talk of a middle-class recession - how particular ‘middle class’ occupations were being badly affected. Architects were one such profession and clearly there’s not much use for this group [...]

Walter Benn Michaels | Diversity is Insufficient

An article by Donagh of Dublin Opinion • September 15th 2009

Walter Benn Michaels: diversity is insufficient
Walter Benn Michaels talks to George Miller for Le Monde Diplomatique podcast about the economic background in the US, and France, and how it affects the question of diversity.
Listen to this first, then read Louis Proyect critique of Benn Michaels’ argument.

The Better-Off Shall Be First: The Recession Diaries - August 25th

John McHale of NUI Galway has produced an outline for a fiscal plan. It is well worth reading. It’s a serious treatment. It’s also an unnerving treatment. For it has the capacity to wreck the Exchequer’s finances with little ‘stimulating’ effect on the economy.
On the way to presenting his fiscal plan John makes some highly [...]

Unemployment and Class in Ireland: An Analysis of the Quarterly Household Survey, Q1 2009

Last month, Seán O’Riain wrote a post for progressive economy, which used the Quarterly Household Survey (Q1 2009 ) to throw some light on the class aspects of the recent rise in unemployment in Ireland.
the major trend that stands out is the disastrous collapse in working class employment with growing differences between the position of [...]

Wages and Employment Structure in the Irish Public Sector, NES 2007

There are strong structural differences in employment between the public and private sector - a fact that is recognised by some, and ignored by others.
The structural differences relate to the types of occupation, education standards, and length of service - all of which affect wage levels. The length of service of those in the public [...]

WAGES AND CLASS IN IRELAND: AN ANALYSIS OF THE NATIONAL EMPLOYMENT SURVEY, 2007

Income is not a determinator of class, and to think of class in such terms is to miss the point that class is a social relation, not a category. Income, however, can be used as an indicator of class relations, as wage levels are usually, although not always, related to the types of positions people [...]

A Paradigm Shift to the Left among ABC1’s?

An article by Gerry Burke of Irish Left Review • October 1st 2008

Do the findings of the TASC survey, The Solidarity Factor - Public Perceptions of Unequal Ireland, published this week, represent a paradigm shift to the left among Irish adults, particularly among wealthier people?
According to the survey of 1000 adults interviewed in April this year, 70% believe wealth distribution in Ireland is unfair and 80% are concerned [...]

Class and Ireland: Part 3 - Records of a Floating Life

An article by Conor McCabe of Dublin Opinion • September 30th 2008

Night is gone, a dawn
comes up in birds and sounds of the city.
There will be light
to live by, things
to see: my eyes will lift
to where the sun in vermilion sits,
and I will love thee and have pity. (Michael Hartnett)
I’m sitting on the small fenced stone wall that surrounds the central bank on Dame Street, [...]

Class and Ireland: Part 2

An article by Conor McCabe of Dublin Opinion • September 11th 2008

I’m standing at the corner of Cathal Brugha Street and Thomas Lane, waiting for my friend Lida to arrive. She’s starting up her own business soon, and wants me to write a blurb for the website. The buses are running a bit late but she gets here around 6.30pm and so we head off for [...]

Sins of the Father

Sins of the Father:

Tracing the Decisions

That Shaped the Irish Economy,

by Conor McCabe

from The History Press

Now Available as an e-Book.

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