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Dublin - Event Notice Thursday January 01 1970 19th Desmond Greaves Summer School
dublin |
miscellaneous |
event notice
Wednesday August 08, 2007 12:36 by Frank Keoghan - Desmond Greaves Summer School 087 230 8330
Labour and Republicanism - The Way Forward?
This year, the Nineteenth Desmond Greaves School will consider the theme: ‘Labour and Republicanism – The Way Forward?’ It will be held in the ATGWU Hall at 55 Middle Abbey St, Dublin 1, from Friday, August 24th to Sunday, August 26th. The School will discuss republicanism as a political philosophy, the relationships and tensions between nationalism, republicanism, and socialism, and how republicanism and labour cna contribute to progressive change in today's Ireland. Against this background, the Republican Congress of the 1930s and the career of Peadar O'Donnell will be reassessed. Among the speakers will be Dr Martin Mangergh, Dr. Eddie Hyland, Eamon Gilmore, Tom Hartley, Eoin O Murchu and Emmet O’ Connor.
Further information from 087-230 8330.
The Nineteenth Desmond Greaves School 2007
Labour and Republicanism – The Way Forward?
Venue: ATGWU Hall, 55 Middle Abbey St., Dublin.
• Friday, August 24th 2007 at 7:30pm:
Republicanism – A Subversive Ideology? :
Eddie Hyland lectures in the Department of Political Science at TCD. He is the author of Democratic Theory: the Philosophical Foundations and a study of James Connolly in the Historical Association of Ireland’s Life and Times Series.
Chair: Vincent Morley is the author of Irish Opinion and the American Revolution 1760–1783 and other works.
• Saturday, August 25th at 11:00am:
The 1930’s Republican Congress.
Emmet O’Connor is a historian specialising in labour history in Ireland. He is the author of Reds and the Green - Ireland, Russia and the Communist Internationals, 1919–43, and Syndicalism in Ireland, 1917–1923.
Chair: Manus O’Riordan is Head of Research, SIPTU, and author of numerous papers and pamphlets on Irish history.
• Saturday, August 25th at 2:30pm:
Socialism, Nationalism and Republicanism: Ideologies in Conflict?
Eoin Ó Murchú, Dáil correspondent of Raidió na Gaeltachta.
Seamas Ó Brógáin, member of the Executive Committee of the Communist Party of Ireland.
Finbar Cullen, Director of the Ireland Institute.
Chair: Sinéad Ní Bhroin is a writer and a political activist with Sinn Féin.
• Sunday, August 26th at 11:00am:
Peadar O’Donnell—Socialist and Republican: A Reassessment.
Peter Hegarty is a writer and broadcaster, and author of Peadar O’Donnell and Paddy Bogside (with Paddy Doherty).
Chair: Declan Bree is an alderman and former TD and Mayor of Sligo.
• Sunday, August 26th at 2:30pm:
Republicanism and Labour in Ireland today: Interaction and Potential.
Eamon Gilmore TD, former Minister of State at the Department of the Marine. He is currently the Labour Party spokesperson on the Environment & Local Government.
Eddie Glackin is an official with SIPTU.
Tom Hartley is a former general secretary and national chairperson of Sinn Féin.
Senator Martin Mansergh is a historian and has played a leading role in formulating Fianna Fáil policy on Northern Ireland and the peace process.
Chair: Eamon Devoy is a trade union official and member of the Executive Committee of ICTU.
Further information:
Director: Frank Keoghan. 087- 230 8330. [email protected]
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Comments (10 of 10)
Jump To Comment: 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1I was there on Saturday afternoon and enjoyed the day.
Ah shur they might as well liven up the proceedings by inviting really lively speakers like O'Reilly and O'Learry. And shur why not invite an economics professor from Peking University to set the scene with a detailed talk entitled: Developing socialism with Chinese characteristics - the success of the Deng Xiaoping new economic model. O'Reilly and O'Leary could explain to the summer schoolers how the Deng Xiaoping Theory of the early 1980s could be or has been applied to the Irish situation. That would beat the wiggling talk of ideological whirligig Eoghan Harris for sheer depth and originality. The custard pie throwers might get a chance too. We mustn't allow this pissing awful weather to dull our minds.
I can't remember a time when Roy Johnston wasn't there - and he is always a contributor and leaves his mark on the character of the school.
With all due respect: it isn't just that Harris has flip-flopped so many times - but that he maintains such high moral sanctimony while doing so - that is so morally, intellectually repellent and bankrupt.
This is the same man who shilled for Ahmed Chalabi (remember him?), the known business fraudster, who was essentially paid to lie to the American public and government, to provide aid and sustenance to the NeoCon war in the Middle East.
And by the way, it isn't just the Left, but the actual consistent conservatives in the US who recognise this war as an unnecessary national disaster - unlike Tony's string puppets in the Independent.
"The White House signed off on a raid on Ahmad Chalabi’s headquarters—the neocon favorite who turned out to be an Iranian agent..."
http://www.amconmag.com/2004_12_20/feature.html
October 24, 2005 Issue
The American Conservative
Money for Nothing
Billions of dollars have disappeared, gone to bribe Iraqis and line contractors’ pockets.
by Philip Giraldi
http://www.amconmag.com/2005/2005_10_24/cover.html
" Iraqi Airways carried 2,400 employees even though it had not operated for over a year and had no planes. The airline itself was sold to an unidentified buyer without any paperwork to show for how much it was sold and what assets were included. It has been alleged that the buyer might well have been Pentagon favorite Ahmad Chalabi."
I've seen Johnston at the Greaves School a number of times in the past.
As to why Harris was invited, perhaps the organisers didn't feel the need for court jester?
Its a pity that Senator Eoghan Harris and his comrade Dr. Roy Johnston have not been invited. Back in 1966 Harris and Johnston founded the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association which grew out of their work in the Wolfe Tone Society. Senator Harris has announced that he is working with Dr. Johnston again to reintroduce the ideas of Wolfe Tone to Irish politics. These two leading political theorists need to be involved in any discussion of the relationship between republicanism and the left.
Some of the contributors, like Emmet O'Connor, who is a serious scholar and the son of a Spanish Civil War fighter, are well worth listening to. Others, however, are not and bring the event into disrepute. In particular, I'm thinking of right-wing opportunists like Mansergh, Hartley and gilmore. What exactly has been their contribution to socialist ideas or practice over the past 20 years or so?
Actually, I meant the seminar BY the guy who wrote about syndicalism, who's actually discussing the 1930s Republican congress.
If I get a chance, I might go to Dublin and attend one of the sessions.
If people are interested in the relationship between republicanism and the left in Ireland, they often discuss such issues in depth at the
fascinating Cedar Lounge Revolution blog:
http://cedarlounge.wordpress.com/
Yeah, they're scheduled for different days, so they probably won't meet. And if they did they'd probably just have a mild disagreement.
That seminar on syndicalism in Ireland sounds very interesting though.
Ah shur it's only one of them umpteen summer talkfests that they call summer schools. (With all this rainshine where's the summer anyway?) If these three gents should meet the best thing would be for them to smile wistfully, behave like gentlemen and have a quiet chat around a table about history and horses, washed down by something exhilirating and dark. I'd love to be a fly on the bar wall when it happens.
Manus O'Riordan is a contributor to the Irish Political Review and a friend of the octogenarian Unionist-turned-Republican Brendan Clifford, both of whom have attacked Martin Mansergh as a “West Brit”. If Manus and Martin do bump into each other the results could be interesting….