logo
Northern Ireland youth keen on a more integrated society but feel it is a long way off

Northern Ireland youth keen on a more integrated society but feel it is a long way off

Irish Times14-05-2025

Forty-eight young people aged between 15 and 25 were brought together in five groups by a Belfast-based think tank late last year to talk about the society they live in and the one they want.
The encounters, however, illustrate the road that Northern Ireland has yet to travel, marked by a lack of hope that things will change in their lifetimes and even caution about bringing about the very change that they say they want to see happen.
In conversations that took place in Belfast, Derry, Enniskillen and south Armagh in September and December, the groups gathered by the Pivotal think tank professed a striking sense of belonging to the local community where they live.
However, that sense of belonging partly illustrates Northern Ireland's still-continuing wider divisions, since most of the young people themselves volunteered that they live in segregated communities.
READ MORE
In the rural areas focused on by Pivotal, this typically meant that the villages or towns where they live are still dominated by people from one religious background.
In Belfast, the divisions live cheek by jowl: 'While people of different religious backgrounds lived there in closer proximity, they did not necessarily share spaces in an integrated way.'
Everyone, no matter how young, understands the meanings of murals and flags, which are 'widely understood' as ways to mark territory and intimidate outsiders.
In Belfast, the so-called 'peace walls' are clear symbols of segregation that they want to see end, yet they have mixed feelings about taking them down. Instead, they suggested that the walls' gates could be kept open for longer.
Some efforts to boost cross-community ties – such as 'special days' at school – are little more than window dressing, the groups felt. Instead, they sought more funding for youth clubs, sports and other settings to create sustained contacts.
'Instead of lasting progress, many grander initiatives both within and outside schools that aim to bring together young people from different backgrounds are too irregular to make a difference.
'Leadership is required if young people are to believe integration can be a genuine aspiration for their generation,' said Pivotal, which issued a report earlier this year that looked at the consequences of segregated schooling.
The priority for some of those involved was for younger students who are just beginning primary school, rather than believing that anything can be done to greatly improve the level of cross-community ties in their own lives.
'In primary school, that's where you make friends easier, that's where you first meet people. That's where you become friends with different people from different cultures and religions easier than you would in high school.
'Like, you're young and once you get to know them like nothing really matters. You don't really care about their religion or anything you just are like friends,' said a 15-year-old girl from south Armagh.
Some of the young people described their experiences of integration 'as an action, rather than a state of being' filled with 'temporary efforts' that they engaged in before returning to the background from which they came.
'
Do you remember the episode in Derry Girls where they were like, 'Right, we've 20 Protestants here, 20 Catholics there?' It's just unnatural, you know. You're forcing questions that maybe some people aren't comfortable in answering
,'
said one 22-year-old man from south Armagh.
Equally, the groups brought together by the think tank believed that Northern Ireland's segregated school system 'helps perpetuate division, with the mandatory teaching of religious education a particular concern for many', said Pivotal.
'However, while there was significant support for integrated education, this was not universal – and it was not seen as a cure all for current social division.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Death In Derry - Martin McGuinness  and the Derry IRA's War Against The British: Strong on candour, weak on analysis
Death In Derry - Martin McGuinness  and the Derry IRA's War Against The British: Strong on candour, weak on analysis

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Death In Derry - Martin McGuinness  and the Derry IRA's War Against The British: Strong on candour, weak on analysis

Death In Derry: Martin McGuinness and the Derry IRA's War Against The British Author : Jonathan Trigg ISBN-13 : 978-1785375477 Publisher : Merrion Press Guideline Price : €19.99 This book is a valuable contribution to the literature of the Troubles period and the history of the IRA. Jonathan Trigg has secured interviews with several former British soldiers and IRA members, many under pseudonyms. This is new material. The weaknesses in the book are that it is not strong on political analysis and that it accepts simplistic versions of key events such as the Battle of the Bogside and the Falls Road rioting of August 1969. He says, for instance, that the 1971 internment raids were not extended to loyalists because of unionist pressure. Actually, this was on legal advice that such a measure could not be used against a force that did not threaten the state – the same logic by which the Irish government refused to intern IRA members at the same time. READ MORE Trigg is happy to describe the period of violence as a war, accepting terminology favoured by the IRA themselves. He writes of IRA activists in a tone bordering on admiration, apparently as one soldier respecting others. [ A former British army officer and author on former IRA members opening up to him: 'Trust is a huge issue' Opens in new window ] That will grate with some who will prefer a more moralistic approach and will not like to read of murders being described as 'successes'. Trigg is a military historian. His strengths are in understanding military culture and warfare. It is almost endearing how he admits to occasional failings in his research. One IRA man refuses to tell him what he was jailed for and he leaves it at that, when another researcher might have gone into the newspaper archives and found out. He misses some important nuances. In a chapter about the south Derry IRA centred around Bellaghy, he attributes the reduced level of republican militancy in the area to the presence of the literary centre Seamus Heaney HomePlace, and the 'thousands of tourists wandering around with their camera phones'. Clearly he hasn't been to Bellaghy lately. However, he has secured the candour of several former Provos and soldiers, and this factor provides an understanding of their actions and their thinking that earns the book a place on the shelves of any serious future researchers or writers on the period. One amusing detail is that the British army developed a remote control camera system for monitoring suspects but had to scrap it because those suspects would hear the click and the whirr of the film winder. That wouldn't be a problem with the technology of today.

Queen's University Belfast divests from Israeli interests in protest over Gaza conflict
Queen's University Belfast divests from Israeli interests in protest over Gaza conflict

Irish Times

time13 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Queen's University Belfast divests from Israeli interests in protest over Gaza conflict

Queen's University Belfast has confirmed it has divested from Israeli companies and universities. A representative for the university told The Irish Times on Friday that 'the final research partnership with an Israeli institution came to an end this week'. The university confirmed it has 'no student exchange programmes with Israel' and 'no direct investment in any Israeli companies'. In June 2024 Queen's announced it would divest from companies blacklisted by the United Nations Human Rights Council, which identifies firms operating in settlements in occupied Palestinian territories that it considers illegal under international law. READ MORE [ TCD's Israeli boycott draws criticism from Ireland's Jewish community Opens in new window ] While the university did not hold any direct investments in Israeli companies on the UN blacklist, it held a number of indirect investments through managed fund products. In May 2024, pro-Palestine student protesters occupied the main building at Queen's University, calling on the university to 'review all ties' with Israeli institutions and universities. Four months later, four men were arrested during a pro-Palestinian protest at Queen's during a protest at the visit of former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton. Kieran Minto, president of university's students' union, told The Irish Times that they welcome the confirmation that the university has fully divested from Israeli companies. They said the decision was a 'direct result of sustained student organising and advocacy' and they will 'continue to work with Queen's to ensure it upholds its commitments to support scholars and students at risk from the devastation in Gaza'. In a statement on Instagram, the 'Decolonise, Demilitarise and Democratise Group' led by students at Queen's rejected 'any narrative suggesting the decision was simply a reaction to actions taken at other universities'. [ Israel confirms it is arming 'clans' in Gaza to combat Hamas Opens in new window ] They said the decision to divest was 'the result of more than a year of positioning, manoeuvring and sustained negotiation with the university'. The board of Trinity College Dublin voted to cut all ties with Israeli universities and institutions on Wednesday. The decision followed a series of meetings of a taskforce set up between staff and student representatives. These meetings were arranged as part of an agreement to end a five-day encampment that was set up on the university's campus in May 2024. Jenny Maguire, outgoing president of Trinity College Dublin Students' Union, called the decision a 'historic win' which 'must be a catalyst for action across this island'.

NI agri minister launches bill to tackle dilapidation
NI agri minister launches bill to tackle dilapidation

Agriland

time15 hours ago

  • Agriland

NI agri minister launches bill to tackle dilapidation

Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs Minister, Andrew Muir, has welcomed Stormont Executive approval to bring forward the Dilapidation Bill to the Assembly. The Bill aims to provide district councils with a modern, consistent, fit-for-purpose Northern Ireland-wide enforcement regime to deal with the negative impact of dilapidated and dangerous buildings, as well as neglected sites. The Bill reflects the powers already available to enforcement bodies in the rest of the UK. It will also significantly enhance the cost recovery powers available to councils, making the option of them carrying out the relevant works themselves much more viable. Minister Muir said: 'We can all see the problems with dilapidated buildings and neglected sites across Northern Ireland, which are a blight on our neighbourhoods that can pose an unacceptable danger to the public. 'People should be able to take pride in their local area, but when buildings are left to deteriorate, it is the entire community that suffers the consequences. 'The Dilapidation Bill will seek to address this problem, ensuring local people can live and work in attractive neighbourhoods and benefit from the associated investment in an area that can come as a result,' he added. The Bill would empower councils to issue a range of enforcement notices to require owners, occupiers and others with a relevant interest to take appropriate remedial action to deal with dilapidation and neglect. It also allows councils to take such action itself, where required, and recover its costs from the relevant person. It is currently envisaged that the Dilapidation Bill be introduced to the Assembly before the summer recess.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store