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Families and frends of victims unlawfully killed during the troubles in Northern Ireland gathered in Derry's Guildhall Square to protest again the legacy bill, May 2022. Alamy Stock Photo

Troubles Legacy Bill 'It's almost as if the UK is writing itself out of the North's history'

Professor Laura McAtackney examines how the UK government’s controversial legacy bill will affect the writing of accurate and balanced histories.

THERE ARE MANY critiques that have been made about the so-called Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy and Reconciliation) Bill (2022), which have primarily highlighted its ultimate aim to limit ‘criminal investigations, legal proceedings, inquests and police complaints’ into the past.

The fact that such a blanket amnesty has been created without consultation or support from any political party, civil organisation or – most importantly – survivor or victims’ groups in Northern Ireland is key to its unacceptability.

To enforce an amnesty without consultation and consent goes against international good practice and provides a structural context in which ‘reconciliation’ is not likely to occur as it is being imposed rather than facilitated.

It is also important to understand why this amnesty is being imposed, while it is expected to be implemented across the board it is essentially being used to address Conservative party angst about ongoing investigations, inquests and trials of British soldiers who were involved in shootings and killings that were largely underinvestigated during the conflict.

Memorialising

This wider context of non-consensual imposition as a mechanism to prevent justice being served is key to considering the viability of the wider provisions of the legislation, especially in terms of how the past is remembered or ‘memorialised’ moving forward.

Part 4 of the Bill relates to ‘memorialising the Troubles’ and facilitating an ‘academic report’ of the conflict. I will mainly focus on this aspect as the latter provision is of most direct interest to researchers of the conflict, especially as it is assumed that academics will be involved in this provision to give it validity and respectability.

When this legislation was first announced there was initial speculation – at least from some academics on Irish social media – that the high profile of academic research was a positive attribute.

After all, if the provision to create an academic report was included in the legislation it should follow that the government would provide access to their papers – indeed it was speculated the legislation may facilitate the early opening of state archives to allow for the proposed report to be written.

Such a response seems fanciful when the wider context is examined. The lack of prior and transparent consultation with the academic community, and many of the features of the Bill being marked by inbuilt political interference – including the lack of transparent process for academic appointment, lack of any reference to state papers and ultimate reporting duties to the Secretary of State – do not bode well for the independence of the role.

Indeed, it is notable in the section on ‘memorialising the Troubles’ what is absent as well as what is present in the legislation.

There is significant space provided for the assessment and creation of oral history, which is an important form for democratising knowledge on the recent past, but hardly one that is currently neglected and its provision does not crossover into the section on the ‘Academic Report’.

In effect, oral histories are seen as one form of knowledge creation and the academic report is viewed as a separate (generally more official) one. However, the Academic Report section provides no mention of historical documentation created and maintained by the British state, never mind provisions for accessing them, to enable this output to be created. It is almost as if the state is writing itself out of those histories other than controlling how they are to be written.

Rewriting the truth

Many commentators and academics have already questioned how fair and open such a process and outcome could be in terms of memorialising the past. A response from legal scholars based at Queen’s University Belfast earlier this year particularly highlighted ‘efforts to privilege work on oral history, memorialisation and academic research on the conflict is, in our view, designed to provide legal and political cover . . . [and] if enacted such proposals could do untold damage to the credibility of such work as a smokescreen for impunity’.

The absence of information related to the extent and accessibility of historical documentation is particularly problematic. 

This is at a time when we consider what is simultaneously happening at The National Archives at Kews in London. It was reported in 2019 that the National Archives had greatly extended the closure period for the files related to state-perpetrated violence against civilians during the conflict, especially victims of plastic bullets fired by the police and/or the British Army.

For example, the file related to the death of Julie Livingstone, who was 14 when she was killed in 1981 by a plastic bullet, had its closure extended in 2019 for a further 45 years for ambiguous reasons related to ‘health and safety’ and ‘personal information where the application is a 3rd party’.

From such a context, it is clear that an independent writing of the history of the Northern Irish Troubles focused on multi-sources and methods cannot be expected, access to state papers is not indicated, and at best this endeavour will deeply skew what we know about the past from the British government’s side.

While there are many important reasons to reject this legislation from a legal perspective – due to the imposition of unwanted amnesties and the closing of routes to justice for victims, survivors and their families – it is just as important to consider how this legislation is attempting to control what we know of the past.

It is paramount that those of us who work with the past, and especially the politics of memory and heritage, highlight the significant problems with this legislation and do not allow it to make claims of respectability by creating palatable histories from partial records that hide the actions of the commissioning state.

Dr Laura McAtackney is a Professor in Radical Humanities Laboratory/Archaeology, at UCC and also a Professor in Heritage Studies at Aarhus University. 

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23 Comments
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    Mute Sam Bartell
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    Feb 5th 2015, 9:08 AM

    Should be able to click in tá and nil to see easier who has voted in favour/against what and who didnt vote at all

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    Mute Mrs Shalakalananaka
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    Feb 5th 2015, 9:30 AM

    There’s an excel sheet online somewhere that tells you where everyone sits so you can work it out. I’m not on the computer at the moment, so I can’t give you the link, but I think it’s on the Dail website. Your way would be a million times handier though.

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    Mute Jason Bourne
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    Feb 5th 2015, 9:45 AM

    Exactly Sam, we are paying for this afterall. It should be accessible as standard.

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    Mute Sam Bartell
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:54 AM

    Mrs that my point though. Why should we need to get an excel sheet out to navigate through democracy? In this day and age we have the technology to make this much more user friendly. Point and click a seat see bio, voting record, attendance, salary, expenses, committee membership, contact details and SIPO returns etc.

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    Mute Mrs Shalakalananaka
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    Feb 5th 2015, 12:04 PM

    I completely agree, the amount of time I waste going through that sheet finding out who voted for what, and after all that, it’s a bit out of date too. I would love to see a page that has all that information in just one click, and to be honest, I reckon I could even make it myself if I had a bit of time, because it’s not even that complicated in terms of technology. But you’re suggesting the Dáil does something that makes complete sense and would make things easier and clearer for voters and people interested in Irish politics. It’s not going to happen. =P

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    Mute gregory
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    Feb 5th 2015, 8:25 PM

    High Treason from Fg and Labour actively blocking any possibility of a deal on bankster debts

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    Mute gregory
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    Feb 5th 2015, 8:30 PM

    What the hell? Fg and labour taking steps against the madness of bailing out bankster debts and undermining any chance of ireland getting a deal. Traitors the lot of them. Afraid greece succeeds where ireland failed in case it makes fg and labour look bad. Party politics over the interest of irish people!

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    Mute Luke D
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    Feb 5th 2015, 9:22 AM

    Because they care more about keeping in with their mates in Brussels than they do about their own people or the Greeks.

    Turn coats

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    Mute Thomas Aquinas
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    Feb 5th 2015, 9:26 AM

    What have the Greeks ever done for us Luke?

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    Mute Juninho
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:07 AM

    Georgios Samaras and Ouzo

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    Mute Ten Major
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:18 AM

    What have the Greeks ever done for us? Gave us the notion of democracy, also a large part of what we call civilisation. among other things.

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    Mute Maurice Bourke
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:31 AM

    Speaking statistically, couldn’t 51% of the country inflict tyranny democratically on the other 49% of the country. With not everyone registered to vote, and with people who are registered and don’t vote, couldn’t a much smaller number like 30% of the people inflict tyranny democratically on the other 70%.

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    Mute Shakka1244
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    Feb 5th 2015, 1:26 PM

    Half of Georgia Salpa?

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    Mute Trevor Beale
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    Feb 5th 2015, 9:15 AM

    They really don’t care!!

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    Mute Live Long
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    Feb 5th 2015, 9:43 AM

    They do care Trevor…..about that cushy Brussels number their all foaming at the mouth for.

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    Mute Coddle Mooney
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:05 AM

    Because our ‘democracy’ is a thin veneer and the Oireachtais largely serves the interests of big capital and not the vast majority of Irish citizens.

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    Mute HULK SMASH!
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    Feb 5th 2015, 9:34 AM

    Corruption

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    Mute Peter Hargan
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:46 AM

    Corruption and TREASON

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    Mute Paul Roche
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    Feb 5th 2015, 9:25 AM

    Sure why would you be inviting people into the town who might blurt what actually happened?

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    Mute gregory
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    Feb 5th 2015, 8:33 PM

    Anyone who voted no against a debt conference should be ousted from dail eireann for not acting in ireland’s interest. Basically all of the government td’s.

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    Mute Mark Wilson
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    Feb 5th 2015, 9:30 AM

    Because we are sado-masochists.
    We enjoy the pain…At least the government has told us we do. In which case,we are also gimp slaves too!!

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    Mute Live Long
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    Feb 5th 2015, 9:41 AM

    Wake the gimp Mark

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    Mute BERTIE
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:11 AM

    Anyone who supports this government or any of its austerity measures is a GIMP, it’s the only way to explain why!

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    Mute Tom Burke
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:11 AM

    Thhe gang of 4 tell the cabinet what to do, the cabinet tells the whips and they tell the TDs which way to vote. Its called democracy Irish style

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    Mute Ivan Murphy
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    Feb 5th 2015, 4:27 PM

    Bang on… the ‘Economic Management Council’ fascism FG styleeee.

    4 guys, whipping everybody else in line.

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    Mute Conor O' Halloran
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:51 AM

    Why did the Dáil vote against a European debt conference?

    I’m going with ‘Stockholm Syndrome’.

    You only had to listen to that eejit Noonan with his ‘we’re alright, we’re not dependent on feta cheese exports’ comment to see that there is no solidarity with anybody that threatens a good pension. If the shoe was on the other foot and some Greek minister dismissivly suggested that ‘the paddys could go back to bartering with potatoes’ we’d have completely lost our collective s***

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    Mute GO GREEN
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:17 AM

    They like dishing out austerity and being the poster boy of austerity especially since they are immune from austerity.

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    Mute littleone
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:33 AM

    Sure why would they vote for a debt conference . They wouldnt want to help the country . They get what they want big wages and pensions paid by the taxpayers no matter what.

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    Mute johngahan
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    Feb 5th 2015, 9:33 AM

    Greece must be on a tracker

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    Mute Juninho
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:08 AM

    Did you enjoy your holidays? One of the perks at FG? Back in overdrive now though I see.

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    Mute Thomas Newell
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:38 AM

    well look what the cat dragged out of the FG sewers

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    Mute RogerThis
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:55 AM

    What is our national debt? €214bn quotes in the article or €154bn quoted in yesterday’s article.

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    Mute Ivan Murphy
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    Feb 5th 2015, 4:23 PM

    Why did the Dáil vote against a European debt conference?

    Because they are spineless fools that would rather bend over for the elite bankers and their political masters in Europe, than do something that might actually benefit the peoples of this country and Europe.

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    Mute Derek Poutch
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    Feb 5th 2015, 2:56 PM

    We are not supporting this hypocrisy,you said it yourself it was their banks and govt who were at fault,why should the average greek person suffer.This new greek govt are supporting their people and are looking for a debt write down because the debt is totally unsustainable.If they kept on going the way they were there would have been violent rebellion.

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    Mute Michael Sands
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    Feb 5th 2015, 6:32 PM

    Because they are the same ones who flushed our sovereignty down the pan???

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    Mute Tony Leavy
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    Feb 5th 2015, 4:13 PM

    As in Ireland the media and academia in Greece did not expose the fraudsters in government and banks who were safely ensconced in positions of power for years and who eventually bankrupted the country.

    Now they want the citizens of other EU countries to pay.

    No way Jose

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    Mute Tony Leavy
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    Feb 5th 2015, 10:37 AM

    The Greeks are making hypocritical demands on other countries in the euro zone, some of which are poorer than Greece, to pay for the recklessness and irresponsibility of their own governments and banks over decades.

    We should not support this hypocrisy.

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    Mute Michael Sands
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    Feb 5th 2015, 6:34 PM

    They were in massive debt but the IMF made it worse for them due to the euro, they had to borrow money to look after the euros wellbeing and that added to their mess.

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    Mute Fergal Canton
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    Feb 6th 2015, 8:16 AM

    Interesting note . The gap in vote was 30 seats. At least 17 opposition seats were marked white for abstentions or no vote. Stop pairing arrangements!

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    Mute mrgillhouley
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    Feb 6th 2015, 4:20 AM

    well done to the government yet again

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    Mute Anne Flynn
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    Feb 8th 2015, 12:58 PM

    Explain to me why we have Peter Sutherland advising the Irish Government when he was the very person whispering in the Irish governments ear during this last minute crisis bailout…. He is Chairman of Goldman Sachs those invested interests are still vested interests…They have taken no hit and suffered no backlash.. The banking inquiry serves NO purpose unless we are changing the system… https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=11Z_WcRJzcA

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