Available Formats
The History of Marriage Equality in Ireland: A Social Revolution Begins
By (Author) Sonja Tiernan
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
13th March 2020
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
306.8109415
Hardback
192
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
Ireland is the first country in the world to extend civil marriage to same sex couples through a public vote. The marriage equality referendum saw record numbers turn out to register their votes including Irish emigrants who returned from around the world to ensure an impressive majority in favour of this constitutional amendment. The overwhelming positive result marked a clear separation of church and State for possibly the first time in Ireland. The Yes Equality campaign ignited a social revolution across Ireland, witnessed more recently with further referenda decriminalising abortion and introducing a less punitive regime for obtaining a divorce. Utilising published reports, newspaper articles, marriage equality papers and extracts from Dail debates, this book traces the key legislative and social changes surrounding Irish marriage equality, from the establishment of the advocacy group in 2008 to the referendum on the extension of civil marriage rights to same-sex couples in Ireland in 2015. With a foreword by Ivana Bacik, a Senator and Reid Professor of Criminal Law, Criminology and Penology at Trinity College Dublin, best known for her tireless work defending human rights, this book offers a concise historical record of the momentous referendum on marriage equality. -- .
'Sonja Tiernans invaluable contribution to the history of social progress in Ireland recognises and celebrates the many unsung heroes who worked for long years to achieve the historic 2015 result.'
From the foreword by Senator Ivana Bacik
'How a revolution is chronicled is almost as important as the revolution itself, because without a clear and informed history, the lessons of the revolution are lost. Luckily for us and for future generations, the lessons of the history of marriage equality in Ireland are safe in the hands - and prose; and sharp mind - of Sonja Tiernan.'
Rory ONeill (Panti Bliss)
The steady if not always stirring story of legal reform and legislative process is one of the important themes threading Tiernans history of Irelands marriage movement. Indeed, despite that revolutionary subtitle, the strength of this book is not a portrait of social revolution but the authors careful and almost methodical representation of the movement and its legal and political contexts. [...] Now we can add Sonja Tiernans careful and rich historical account to [the] little bookshelf of radical change.
Estudios Irlandeses
I have no doubt that this book will inspire future studies on the history of LGBTQ rights and activism in Ireland [...] I hope that future research will build on Tiernans excellent work and utilise oral history to further illuminate the experiences of Irish LGBTQ men and women and activists.'
Women's History Association of Ireland
'Reminds us that successful campaigns often build on the hard, decades-long work of activists.'
Michaela Appeltova, Radical History Review
'Tiernan takes the reader on a very well-mapped journey through the ups and downs and complications of the campaign for equal marriage, which included tensions between those that sought civil partnership and those that believed only same-sex marriage would bring real equality. Tiernans study is a tribute to activism; it highlights what thankless work it can often be and how determination is the key ingredient required. Crucially, she reinforces the value of knowing the history of things because the arguments and tactics used to block change are rarely new.'
Lindsey Earner-Byrne, Irish Historical Studies (2022), 46 (169)
Sonja Tiernan is the Eamon Cleary Chair of Irish Studies and co-director of the Centre for Irish and Scottish Studies at the University of Otago