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Featured researches published by Niamh Hourigan.


Irish Journal of Sociology | 1998

Framing Processes and the Celtic Television Campaigns

Niamh Hourigan

Speakers of Welsh, Irish and Scots Gaelic have expressed a demand for television services in their respective languages since the mid-sixties. This demand however, has manifested itself in very different forms in each linguistic community. In this article, frame alignment, the newest strand of social movement analysis developed by advocates of resource mobilization, is used to account for these differences. The tactical repertoires which the collective actors established to achieve their demands are compared and the frames which each campaign group drew on to contextualize their campaigns are examined. The analysis suggests is that a similarity in the framing process can help to account for the congruence in tactics between the Welsh and Irish campaign groups in the early stages of the Irish campaign.


British Accounting Review | 2018

Regulatory disclosure and the Irish Financial Services Ombudsman

Mark Mulcahy; Matthias Beck; Michelle Carr; Niamh Hourigan

Abstract This study investigates the effectiveness of a public sector financial management initiative. Specifically, the powers awarded to the Irish Financial Services Ombudsman (FSO) in 2013 to name and shame malfeasance by financial service providers (FSPs) in its annual reports. As the first country to award such powers to its public sector financial ombudsman, Ireland represents a novel setting in which to test the impact of regulatory disclosure as a way to promote accountability and transparency. Our results show that the number of complaints lodged against malfeasants dropped in the immediate aftermath of this and, following a one-year lag, so did the percentage of complaints lodged that proceeded to a full investigation and legally binding finding. Despite the failure of such strategies in some jurisdictions, the Irish experience indicates that regulatory disclosure can, in line with Neo-Durkheimian institutional theory and consistent with the accounting and accountability literature, have considerable impact where and when contextual preconditions are met. These findings have important implications for the operationalisation of regulatory disclosure as an accountability enhancing measure in other jurisdictions.


Archive | 2011

Understanding Limerick: Social Exclusion and Change

Niamh Hourigan


Archive | 2007

Minority language media : concepts, critiques and case studies

Mike Cormack; Niamh Hourigan


European Journal of Communication | 2001

New Social Movement Theory and Minority Language Television Campaigns

Niamh Hourigan


Policy and Practice; a Development Education Review | 2008

Institutional cultures and development education

Niamh Hourigan


Archive | 2012

Juvenile Justice, Crime and Early Intervention: Key Challenges from the Limerick Context

Niamh Hourigan


Trends in Organized Crime | 2018

Crime in Ireland north and south: Feuding gangs and profiteering paramilitaries

Niamh Hourigan; John F. Morrison; James Windle; Andrew Silke


Critical Social Policy | 2015

Book Review: Sarah Pickard (ed.) Anti-Social Behaviour in Britain: Victorian and Contemporary Perspectives

Niamh Hourigan


Archive | 2013

How State policy helped create a fertile gangland breeding ground.

Niamh Hourigan

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Mark Mulcahy

University College Cork

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Andrew Silke

University of Leicester

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James Windle

University of East London

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