oD support open standards:

About Robin Wilson

Robin Wilson founded the Belfast-based think-tank Democratic Dialogue. He now works as an independent researcher

Articles by Robin Wilson

Friday 24th June

Why sectarian fight persists in Northern Ireland

This week has seen sectarian rioting between Catholics and Protestants in Belfast. Why does violence continue in Northern Ireland?
Thursday 12th May

The Northern Ireland Assembly elections revealed the failures of devolution

The big story of the Northern Ireland Assembly elections was not the re-instating of the DUP and Sinn Fein, but the dramatic fall-off in turnout. Voter apathy reveals the failures of devolution in such vital areas as education, public service management and the control of paramilitary violence
Tuesday 26th April

Five

The odd thing was that it turned out the man whose communist spectre frightened the 19th century world saved it in the 21st. Marx would have chortled at the irony. But he had seen it coming. He watched in England as the rapacious capitalists threatened to destroy their workforce—a mere ‘externality’ for each of them—through exploiting children and making adults work impossibly long hours. And he wrote in Capital volume I of how the labour movement had actually secured the long-term interest of capital by fighting successfully for the eight-hour day. Two centuries  on, the green industrial revolution had achieved the same outcome—this time with the ecological movement in the van in saving capital from itself. 
True, the more progressive capitalists could see the markets in green technologies and supported the case for regulation, so they didn’t fight to the death. And the demise of the Chinese dictatorship, when it could no longer keep cutting off the Hydra heads of internet-based civil society movements, was a key moment. Funnily enough, the US, with its rusting oil and car industries shrouding the one-time democratic ‘beacon on the hill’, was neither here nor there.

Karl Marx http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/fc/Karl_Marx.jpg/500px-Karl_Marx.jpg
Friday 3rd September

Blair's flawed approach to peace in Northern Ireland

Tony Blair's effort in bringing about the Good Friday Agreement in Northern Ireland is often heralded as his greatest achievement, but the approach he took to the peace process has left a mixed legacy.
Thursday 25th February
Wednesday 18th November

Ireland's lost revolution

A new history of the Workers' Party inspires Robin Wilson to reflect on a movement that helped to change the face of modern Ireland
Monday 16th March

Northern Ireland: guns, words and publics

A spate of paramilitary killings highlights tension in Ireland's post-1998 settlement
Wednesday 13th August

Northern Ireland could stymie "super-department"

Robin Wilson (Belfast, Policy Analyst): The suggestion that the various secretaries of state for the nations and regions should be wrapped up into one department has made sense ever since devolution was established in the initial years of ‘New’ Labour. But devolution to Scotland, Wales and (always shakily) Northern Ireland was, paradoxically, characterised by the patrician English trope of amateurish muddling through. And so the repeated case made by the Constitution Unit for a formal system of intergovernmental relations, as in Canada or Australia—and of which the unified department would have been one element, along with Lords reform to make the second chamber a voice for the nations and regions—fell on deaf Whitehall ears. Other departments in effect became ‘English’ departments, even when their actions had implications for devolved counterparts.

A decision to move belatedly towards having a single minister for the devolved jurisdictions at the cabinet table—a further step from the rather awkward job-sharing of recent years—would certainly be welcome, if media speculation is borne out. But a fly in the ointment remains Northern Ireland—and if such a move were premised on a belief that imminent devolution of policing and justice powers would slot in the last piece of the jigsaw of a settlement for the troubled region, this could turn out to be a mistaken assumption.

Tuesday 4th April

Ireland's blocked path to reconciliation

The controversy surrounding the murder of Denis Donaldson, a former senior Sinn Féin official who spied for Britain, underlines the need for political transparency and responsibility in Northern Ireland, says Robin Wilson of Democratic Dialogue.
Tuesday 11th October

Northern Ireland's peace by peace

Stephen Howe’s dissection of Ulster Loyalist culture suggests that a link between new institutions and changed ways of thinking is the route to a settled society, says Robin Wilson of Democratic Dialogue.
Wednesday 16th March

The end of the IRA

Five fearless, grieving sisters may break the back of Europe’s most successful terrorist movement, writes Robin Wilson in Northern Ireland
Syndicate content