posted on 2006-09-04, 12:04authored byMaurice Fitzgerald
This paper examines the implications for social life of the phenomenal economic growth that has taken place in Ireland since it joined the EU. The author argues that the benefits of economic growth have not been evenly distributed between rural and urban areas, social categories and women and men, and suggests that the changes have created important challenges for policy formulation as well as for implementation.
History
School
Social Sciences
Department
Politics and International Studies
Pages
42767 bytes
Citation
FITZGERALD, M., 2000. Ireland before and after accession to the European Union. Cross-national research papers, 6(2), pp. 61-67
This article has been published in the journal, Cross-National Research Papers. The definitive version is available at: http://www.iprosec.org.uk/Section2.html and http://www.xnat.org.uk/Section2.html