The Irish Political Review is a monthly Irish magazine dedicated to Irish politics and history. It is known for its criticisms of historians associated with the "revisionist" view of Irish history, especially Peter Hart[1][2] and Roy Foster.[1][3]
Background
The magazine was first published in 1986, by Athol Books, a publisher linked with the British and Irish Communist Organisation (B&ICO).[4] The Irish Political Review was the successor to the B&ICO magazine, The Irish Communist.[4][5]
Views on Irish history and politics
Originally, the Irish Political Review was inimical towards Irish Republicans and supported the use of the Diplock Court system and Section 31 against Republicans.[6] However, it moved away from this position and currently expresses support for Irish Republican parties.[7]
In the late 1990s the Irish Political Review came to public notice when it began running articles strongly critical towards the work of Peter Hart, especially Hart's account of the Dunmanway killings.[1][3] The Irish Political Review also ran a series of articles by Brendan Clifford and Jack Lane about the wartime intelligence work of writer Elizabeth Bowen, claiming this meant that the Anglo-Irish Bowen was thus not an Irish writer.[8] These
articles were later published as the Athol Books publication Notes on Eire: Espionage Reports to Winston Churchill, 1940–2 (1999).[9] The magazine also published an article by Joe Keenan strongly hostile towards former Irish TaoiseachGarret FitzGerald, claiming that Fitzgerald's reputation for intelligence and integrity was unjustified.[10]
Desmond Fennell has written several pieces for the Irish Political Review.[13]
Views on foreign affairs
The Irish Political Review supported Robert Mugabe in what it called "the Zimbabwe Land War" (by analogy with the Irish Land War of the 1880s); it argues that Mugabe's opponents are manipulated by white commercial farmers (whom it compares to nineteenth-century Irish landlords) and other neo-colonial interests.[14]
Malachi Lawless, the chair of the Irish Political Review group, and
Eileen Courtney, the magazine's editor, were among those signing an
Irish petition protesting against the Israeli government's handling of
the Gaza War (2008–09).[19]
However, in 2012 IPR contributor Jack Lane argued that Ireland needed to vote in favour of the European Fiscal Compact, stating that a "Yes" vote would help the EU to function without British involvement.[21]
^ abcCillian McGrattan, Memory, politics and identity :haunted by history. Basingstoke : Palgrave Macmillan, 2013. ISBN9780230292000 (p. 183)
^Richard English, Irish Freedom :the history of nationalism in Ireland. London : Macmillan, 2006.ISBN1405041897 (p. 526)
^ abJohn M.Regan. "The ‘Bandon Valley Massacre’as a historical problem." History 97.325 (2012): (pp. 70-98).
^ abPeter Barberis, John McHugh and Mike Tyldesley, Encyclopedia of British and Irish Political Organizations. London : Pinter, 2000. ISBN1855672642 (p. 143).
^Ulrich's international periodicals directory. New York : Bowker, 1965-2000. ISSN 0000-0175 (p. 4833)
^Sean Swan. "Where is the Irish Border? Theories of Division in Ireland." Nordic Irish Studies (2005): (pp. 61-87).
^Brian W. Shaffer (editor) The Encyclopedia of Twentieth-Century Fiction (Volume One). Chichester : Wiley-Blackwell, 2011. ISBN9781405192446 (p. 45)
^Maud Ellman. Elizabeth Bowen: The Shadow Across the Page. Edinburgh, Scotland: Edinburgh University Press. 2003, p. 35. ISBN978-0-7486-1702-9
^Markus Kornprobst, Irredentism in European politics : Argumentation, Compromise and Norms. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2008. ISBN9780521895583 (p. 207, 276)
^Could we have issued a credible threat to Europe in September 2008, which would have involved us committing economic suicide? In this reviewer's opinion the answer is "no". John Martin, Review of Brian Lenihan: In Calm and Crisis. Irish Political Review, December 2014. Volume 29, Number 12.ISSN 0790-7672 (p.10-13).
^Brian Cowen should not have been deposed as FF leader before the election". John Martin, Review of Brian Lenihan: In Calm and Crisis. Irish Political Review, December 2014. Volume 29, Number 12.
ISSN 0790-7672 (p.10-13).
^"The Union is at a dead end, and inter-Governmental arrangements which leave Britain isolated have had to be made. This referendum presents an opportunity to re-establish an older alliance than the EU, an opportunity to put real flesh on the alliance proclaimed in 1916 with 'our gallant allies in Europe'. If this Referendum succeeds, that would be clearly evident for the centenary of 1916 and that event could then take on a whole new meaning. Vote Yes!" : Jack Lane, "A New Treaty With 'Our Gallant Allies'", Irish Political Review, May 2012
^"A Trump victory would oblige Europe to become something other than an American poodle, and it finds that prospect too awful to contemplate". "Trump V. Clinton" (Editorial), Irish Political Review, November 2016, Vol. 31, No. 11 ISSN 0790-7672 (p.5)
^"Also on the panel was Jeremy Corbyn's Shadow Minister for Education, Angela Rayner, apparently a typical member of the Snowflake Generation . She wasn't interested in Trump's record as a good employer, or his foreign policy. All that concerned her, as a potential Cabinet Minister in a major state was that piece of secretly recorded banter." "Trump V. Clinton" (Editorial), Irish Political Review, November 2016, Vol. 31, No. 11 ISSN 0790-7672 (p.5)