Workers, Politics and Labour Relations in Independent Ireland, 1922–46

Book launch: Workers, Politics and Labour Relations in Independent Ireland, 1922–46

Author Dr Gerard Hanley is a research fellow in the School of History and Geography

Dr Gerard Hanley from the Dublin City University School of History and Geography today launched his new book, Workers, Politics and Labour Relations in Independent Ireland, 1922–46. This book assesses the position of workers, trade unionism and labour relations from the foundation of the Irish Free State to the establishment of the Labour Court under the Industrial Relations Act 1946. 

This is the first comprehensive examination of labour relations, in the context of political, social, and economic developments during the early decades of Irish independence. Based on rigorous and extensive research of varied and vast material in British and Irish archives, the book is constructed around three central themes that influenced the development of labour relations in Ireland: the impact of the Civil War, the extent and impact of unemployment, and the challenges for trade unionism in the formative decades of independent Ireland. 

Workers, Politics and Labour Relations in Independent Ireland, 1922–46 provides a unique, stimulating, and thought-provoking account of how successive governments and the trade union movement engaged with one another and contributed, in various ways, to the development of Ireland’s labour relations norms. 

Author Dr Gerard Hanley holds a PhD in history from Dublin City University where he is a research fellow in the School of History and Geography. He is co-author with Daithí Ó Corráin of Cathal Brugha: An Indomitable Spirit (Dublin, 2022).