As a former journalist, I do relish getting hold of a government report that makes eminently sensible recommendations but which politicians for some obscure reason do not want the public to see. So I was delighted when earlier this [...]
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Home > Notes From The Next Door Neighbours
As a former journalist, I do relish getting hold of a government report that makes eminently sensible recommendations but which politicians for some obscure reason do not want the public to see. So I was delighted when earlier this [...] 31st August 2010 | Category: Notes From The Next Door Neighbours
It is perhaps a significant pointer for the future that one of the most successful examples of North-South cooperation over the past decade has been in a vital area which is not even covered by the 1998 Belfast/Good Friday [...] 31st July 2010 | Tags: Energy | Category: Notes From The Next Door Neighbours
Armagh is now on the Irish diplomatic circuit. Next month the highly regarded Southern Joint Secretary of the North South Ministerial Council (NSMC), Tom Hanney, leaves to become Irish ambassador to Belgium. His successor, Anne Barrington, is finishing her [...] 29th June 2010 | Category: Notes From The Next Door Neighbours
Growing up as a Northern Irish and British boy in the 1950s and 1960s, it was an article of faith that the wealthy United Kingdom had the best welfare state in the world and the Republic of Ireland was [...] 31st May 2010 | Category: Notes From The Next Door Neighbours
Here is some good news. The postal service between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland works well. A report in February by Consumer Focus Post, the consumer ‘quango’ which looks after the interests of users of the UK [...] 30th April 2010 | Category: Notes From The Next Door Neighbours
I have just returned from Malawi in southern Africa where I was with a group of Irish and Northern Irish university academics in health, education and ICT who are working with colleagues in Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania and Uganda on [...] 31st March 2010 | Category: Notes From The Next Door Neighbours
On 20 February I addressed a Sinn Fein conference in London on Irish unity. It was very much an event for preaching to the converted. Apart from the historian Lord Bew, I think I was probably the only [...] 27th February 2010 | Category: Notes From The Next Door Neighbours
If I ever became Mayor of Armagh, the first thing I would do is to give the freedom of the city to the Vallely family. John B. Vallely is the best known of them, an artist who despite his [...] 29th January 2010 | Category: Notes From The Next Door Neighbours
Cross-border cooperation in Ireland is not exactly trendy. Much of it involves the painstaking building of trust and relationships, often as a pre-requisite to working on practical joint projects. Almost by definition, such mundane, ‘under the radar’ work rarely gets a mention in the media. It’s probably just as well, since such politically sensitive relationship-building could easily be destroyed by crude tabloid journalism. Maybe we should be relieved that most journalists think of cross-border cooperation as ‘do-goodery’ that is not newsworthy, lacking the elements of clash and controversy which is their usual stock in trade, and believe – almost certainly correctly – that anything to do with Northern Ireland is now deeply boring to the great newspaper-reading and TV-watching public in other parts of these islands. I should know – I was a journalist for 26 years.
22nd December 2009 | Category: Notes From The Next Door Neighbours
On 13th December 1999 a long line of black Mercedes snaked across the border into Armagh for the first meeting of the new North/South Ministerial Council set up by the Good Friday Agreement the previous year to oversee the new cross-border ‘Strand Two’ institutions established by that Agreement. There to meet them was the first group of civil servants from Belfast and Dublin who were going to staff this extraordinary experiment in inter-jurisdictional cooperation on the island of Ireland. 10 years on it is generally accepted – even occasionally by DUP politicians – that this new era of good relations between North and South has been, along with the reform of policing, one of the real success stories of the Northern Ireland peace process. Continue reading Civil Servants and EU Officials are Peacebuilders too 27th November 2009 | Category: Notes From The Next Door Neighbours
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