Description
Book SynopsisThis book sheds light on Irish republican prisoners during the Northern Irish Troubles and the ways in which they shaped the peace process from within the internment camps and prisons.
Trade Review"Learning behind Bars is an interesting, informative and scholarly work." -- Gerry Moriarty *
Irish Times *
"..with its chronological panorama, and the geographical and organisational range of its interview partners, Reinisch’s book offers a valuable perspective on the experiences of republican prisoners at the periphery of the movement… his book is of undoubted value for scholars of the Northern Ireland conflict and, more broadly, for analysts of incarceration and the internal dynamics of militant social movements." -- Jack Hepworth, St Catherine’s College, Oxford *
Oral History Journal *
"This is an important account of the role of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) prisoners who were imprisoned on both sides of the Irish border who were instrumental in starting the critical debate that ultimately contributed to resolving the Northern Ireland conflict through the 1994 Provisional (IRA) ceasefire and the Good Friday Agreement of 1998." -- Joshua Sinai *
Perspectives on Terrorism *
"Drawing on the experience of learners and employing a framework which enables generalisations to be made from the particularities of Ireland, Dieter Reinisch makes a powerful case for the value of education in prisons for prisoners, prisons, and the wider society." -- Daniel Weinbren, Open University *
Journal of Prison Education and Reentry *
Table of ContentsIllustrations Preface Abbreviations Introduction 1. The Irish Prison Arena: Republican Prisoners and the Northern Ireland Conflict 2. “Portlaoise is an example for this”: Portlaoise Prison Protests, 1973–7 3. “No prisoner has the right to advance the education of another”: Education in Portlaoise Prison 4. The Harvey/McCaughey/Smith Cumann: Sinn Féin in Portlaoise Prison, 1978–86 5. “He was just rhyming off pages of it”: Internment and the Brownie Papers, 1971–7 6. Marxist Esperanto and Socialism in Cell 26: Reading, Thinking, and Writing in the H-Blocks, 1983–9 7. “It's only when you look back …”: The Fall of the Berlin Wall and the Peace Process in the 1990s Conclusion: An Irish Century of Camps Interview Partners Notes Bibliography Index