Micro-patterns of violence: disaggregating Provisional Irish Republican Army activity, 1969-1979

<p>This thesis examines the first ten years of the campaign of political violence that was waged by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) during the Northern Ireland Troubles (c.1969–1998). The primary aim is to understand how and why the PIRA chose to apply violence, and the consequenc...

Deskribapen osoa

Xehetasun bibliografikoak
Egile nagusia: Kowalski, RC
Beste egile batzuk: Mulholland, M
Formatua: Thesis
Hizkuntza:English
Argitaratua: 2023
Gaiak:
_version_ 1826310449639981056
author Kowalski, RC
author2 Mulholland, M
author_facet Mulholland, M
Kowalski, RC
author_sort Kowalski, RC
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis examines the first ten years of the campaign of political violence that was waged by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) during the Northern Ireland Troubles (c.1969–1998). The primary aim is to understand how and why the PIRA chose to apply violence, and the consequences of these decisions. What is significant about this thesis, is the volume and range of PIRA violence that has been disaggregated and assessed – fatal and non-fatal acts of violence; targeted assassinations that were planned and executed as intended; operations that were stillborn, off-target, or thwarted by the security forces; attacks that maimed or killed unintended targets; and acts that were never intended to and did not cause physical harm to others. The work uncovers a richer account of the relationship between PIRA agency, chance, and the character and consequences of PIRA violence than has hitherto been possible.</p> <p>The research has involved a detailed investigation of the PIRA’s activity to establish how, when where and why the violence took different forms. The PIRA’s operations have been examined in minute detail to identify and evaluate the significance of various characteristics that are apparent in each stage of the process: its design, execution, outcome, and reception. This has involved first, identifying why the PIRA selected certain targets and tactics, and the extent to which they perpetrated violence with accuracy and discrimination in each scenario. Second, the different outcomes that are produced – directly or indirectly – as a result of PIRA violence (including the material damage, deaths and injuries caused) and the relationship between these outcomes and the actions taken by the perpetrator(s), have been explored. Finally, the thesis considers how and why the armed struggle was perceived in disparate ways by others.</p>
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:51:20Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:d7ee9817-3144-4ebc-997e-b82b42899a1c
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T07:51:20Z
publishDate 2023
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:d7ee9817-3144-4ebc-997e-b82b42899a1c2023-07-14T09:59:09ZMicro-patterns of violence: disaggregating Provisional Irish Republican Army activity, 1969-1979Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:d7ee9817-3144-4ebc-997e-b82b42899a1cViolenceMilitary history, ModernPolitical violenceNorthern Ireland--History--1968-1998Ulster (Northern Ireland and Ireland)HistoryEnglishHyrax Deposit2023Kowalski, RCMulholland, MMcBride, I<p>This thesis examines the first ten years of the campaign of political violence that was waged by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) during the Northern Ireland Troubles (c.1969–1998). The primary aim is to understand how and why the PIRA chose to apply violence, and the consequences of these decisions. What is significant about this thesis, is the volume and range of PIRA violence that has been disaggregated and assessed – fatal and non-fatal acts of violence; targeted assassinations that were planned and executed as intended; operations that were stillborn, off-target, or thwarted by the security forces; attacks that maimed or killed unintended targets; and acts that were never intended to and did not cause physical harm to others. The work uncovers a richer account of the relationship between PIRA agency, chance, and the character and consequences of PIRA violence than has hitherto been possible.</p> <p>The research has involved a detailed investigation of the PIRA’s activity to establish how, when where and why the violence took different forms. The PIRA’s operations have been examined in minute detail to identify and evaluate the significance of various characteristics that are apparent in each stage of the process: its design, execution, outcome, and reception. This has involved first, identifying why the PIRA selected certain targets and tactics, and the extent to which they perpetrated violence with accuracy and discrimination in each scenario. Second, the different outcomes that are produced – directly or indirectly – as a result of PIRA violence (including the material damage, deaths and injuries caused) and the relationship between these outcomes and the actions taken by the perpetrator(s), have been explored. Finally, the thesis considers how and why the armed struggle was perceived in disparate ways by others.</p>
spellingShingle Violence
Military history, Modern
Political violence
Northern Ireland--History--1968-1998
Ulster (Northern Ireland and Ireland)
History
Kowalski, RC
Micro-patterns of violence: disaggregating Provisional Irish Republican Army activity, 1969-1979
title Micro-patterns of violence: disaggregating Provisional Irish Republican Army activity, 1969-1979
title_full Micro-patterns of violence: disaggregating Provisional Irish Republican Army activity, 1969-1979
title_fullStr Micro-patterns of violence: disaggregating Provisional Irish Republican Army activity, 1969-1979
title_full_unstemmed Micro-patterns of violence: disaggregating Provisional Irish Republican Army activity, 1969-1979
title_short Micro-patterns of violence: disaggregating Provisional Irish Republican Army activity, 1969-1979
title_sort micro patterns of violence disaggregating provisional irish republican army activity 1969 1979
topic Violence
Military history, Modern
Political violence
Northern Ireland--History--1968-1998
Ulster (Northern Ireland and Ireland)
History
work_keys_str_mv AT kowalskirc micropatternsofviolencedisaggregatingprovisionalirishrepublicanarmyactivity19691979