www.conflictresearch.org.uk segregated lives: social division, sectarianism and everyday life in...

8
www.conflictresearch.org. uk Segregated Lives: Social Division, Sectarianism and Everyday Life in Northern Ireland Neil Jarman

Post on 22-Dec-2015

218 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

www.conflictresearch.org.uk

Segregated Lives: Social Division, Sectarianism and Everyday Life in

Northern Ireland

Neil Jarman

www.conflictresearch.org.uk

Rationale

• To analyse the ways and means that sectarianism and segregation are sustained and extended through the routine and mundane decisions of everyday lives.

• Pierre Bourdieu – We live as social beings in a world of “structured structures predisposed to function as structuring structures”.

www.conflictresearch.org.uk

Background

• 18 month qualitative study.

• Funded by CRC through SEUPB.

• 168 participants in six different locations across Northern Ireland.

• Variety of methodologies – interviews, walks, diaries, mapping

www.conflictresearch.org.uk

Locations

• Belfast – Tigers Bay / New Lodge

• Belfast – Stranmillis

• Newry – Shandon Park

• Ballymena – Dunclug

• Castlederg / Newtownstewart

• Kilrea

www.conflictresearch.org.uk

Legacy and Class

1. Segregation a continuing legacy of Troubles

2. Impacts differently on different people

3. Impact of class on segregation

4. Importance of visibility and anonymity

www.conflictresearch.org.uk

Economic Aspects

5. Nature of segregation is changing

6. Economic regeneration has positive and negative impacts

7. More neutral / shared spaces

8. But co-exist with high segregation

9. Shopping increasingly neutral

www.conflictresearch.org.uk

Daily Routines

9. Work: neutrality and avoidance10.Education: segregation & informal

integration 11.Resources: access related to time of

day and of year12.Leisure: people socialise where they

feel safe

www.conflictresearch.org.uk

Key Findings

13.Asserting community ID threatens cohesion

14.Denying community ID threatens belonging

15.Segregation impacts more on young than old and most on young men