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Good Relations Strategy 2012 – 2016
Northern Ireland Assembly Commission Good Relations Strategy 2012 – 2016 1. Introduction 1.1 Under Section 75(2) of the Northern Ireland Act 1998, the Northern Ireland Assembly Commission (‘the Commission’) is required to have regard to the desirability of promoting good relations between persons of different religious belief, political opinion or racial group. This Strategy sets out how the Commission proposes to fulfil this duty in relation to the functions for which it is responsible. 1.2 Good Relations Action Plan (2010-2011) This plan covered a one-year period. Following the end of the 2010-2011 plan period a progress report was issued to the Equality Commission in September 2011 setting out the progress made towards the actions detailed within the plan. 1.3 Good Relations Action Plan (2012-2016) The Commission has now developed new targets and actions in this current plan which spans a 4 year period in line with our Corporate Strategy. This Good Relations Strategy contains the Commission’s Good Relations Policy and its second Good Relations Action Plan for the 2012 – 2016 period. 2. Context 2.1 The Commission’s purpose is to serve and support the Assembly in its role of representing the interests of the electorate; making effective legislation; and influencing the Executive and holding it to account. 2.2 The Commission’s vision is to be at the forefront of providing outstanding and progressive parliamentary services. The Northern Ireland Act 1998 states, “there shall be a body corporate known as the Northern Ireland Assembly Commission (“the Commission”) to perform: (a) the functions conferred on the Commission by virtue of any enactment; and (b) any functions conferred on the Commission by resolution of the Assembly.” 2.3 The Commission is the body corporate of the Northern Ireland Assembly. -
Committee for Education Minutes of Proceedings 3
Northern Ireland Assembly COMMITTEE FOR EDUCATION Minutes of Proceedings WEDNESDAY 3 March 2021 Video Conference Present by Video Conference: Mr Chris Lyttle MLA (Chairperson) Mr Pat Sheehan MLA (Deputy Chairperson) Mr Maurice Bradley MLA Ms Nicola Brogan MLA Mr Robbie Butler MLA Mr William Humphrey MBE MLA Mr Daniel McCrossan MLA Mr Justin McNulty MLA Mr Robin Newton MBE MLA Apologies: None In Attendance: Ms Aoibhinn Treanor (Assembly Clerk) Mr Mark McQuade (Assistant Clerk) Mr Craig Mealey (Clerical Supervisor) Ms Emma Magee (Clerical Officer) The meeting commenced at 9:04 am in public session. 1. Apologies There were no apologies. 2. Chairperson’s Business 2.1 General Teaching Council for Northern Ireland (GTCNI) The Chairperson reminded members that the Committee agreed to arrange oral briefings with the Department of Education and the General Teaching Council NI on its role, legal vires and stakeholder concerns at its meeting on Wednesday 24 March 2021. Agreed: The Committee agreed to be briefed informally by the Northern Ireland Teachers Council (NITC) on their concerns about GTCNI on 9 March 2021. 2.2 Tabled items The Committee noted correspondence from the Department in regard to school restart and exams; covid-19 vulnerable children plan benchmarking, vaccination and pandemic learning; the recruitment arrangements for a chairperson, vice- chairperson and panel member of the imminent New Decade New Approach Review of Education, which are unregulated appointments; and notification of the termination of the Transformation programme; for discussion with the Minister on 10 March. 2.3 Recent announcements The Chairperson informed members of the publication of the Department’s Emotional Health and Wellbeing Framework and of the Teachers’ Pay settlement. -
Non-Nationalist Politics in a Bi-National Consociation: the Case of the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland
1 Non-nationalist politics in a bi-national consociation: the case of the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland David Mitchell Trinity College Dublin at Belfast Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 24:3, 1-12. 2018 Through a case study of the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland, this article examines the contention that consociational power-sharing, in its determination to include dominant and conflicting identity groups, exalts these identities and excludes others including gender, class and other ethnicities and nationalities. The article describes and assesses the Alliance Party’s arguments that the power-sharing arrangements in Northern Ireland are philosophically objectionable, practically ineffective, and politically detrimental to parties which, like Alliance, are designated as ‘others’. The article finds that the party’s critique of consociationalism as implemented in Northern Ireland is overstated and that the party has been able to play a number of pivotal roles in the new politics. Northern Ireland’s Belfast/Good Friday Agreement is one of the most studied consociational settlements.1 The 1998 accord (hereafter ‘the Agreement’) appeared to enable the region’s transition out of decades of political violence and exclusion, making Northern Ireland, for many analysts, “the key confirming case for consociational theory”.2 However, the Agreement has also faced an array of academic, political and civil society detractors, many of whom have focussed on the specific criticism of consociational power-sharing which is the subject of this special section: that in its determination to include the dominant and conflicting national identity groups, consociationalism exalts these identities and excludes others, including gender, class and other ethnicities and nationalities.3 This article examines the ‘exclusion amid inclusion dilemma’ through the case study of the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland. -
Parliamentary Debates (Hansard)
Wednesday Volume 547 4 July 2012 No. 25 HOUSE OF COMMONS OFFICIAL REPORT PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES (HANSARD) Wednesday 4 July 2012 £5·00 © Parliamentary Copyright House of Commons 2012 This publication may be reproduced under the terms of the Parliamentary Click-Use Licence, available online through The National Archives website at www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/information-management/our-services/parliamentary-licence-information.htm Enquiries to The National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW9 4DU; e-mail: [email protected] 899 4 JULY 2012 900 House of Commons Welfare Reform 2. Mr Tom Clarke (Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill) Wednesday 4 July 2012 (Lab): What assessment he has made of the effects of welfare reform on Northern Ireland. [114371] The House met at half-past Eleven o’clock The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (Mr Owen PRAYERS Paterson): The reforms that we have introduced give us a rare opportunity to transform our welfare system into one that is fair to all, looks after the most vulnerable in [MR SPEAKER in the Chair] society, and above all, always rewards work. Mr Clarke: In view of recent criticisms of the Work Oral Answers to Questions programme and the Prime Minister’s view that housing benefit for the under-25s should be discontinued, can the right hon. Gentleman tell us what the Government’s NORTHERN IRELAND policy is for youngsters? Is it to create jobs or simply to tolerate their exploitation? The Secretary of State was asked— Mr Paterson: I think the right hon. Gentleman Fuel Laundering underestimates the fact that the issue is devolved, and we are working closely with the devolved Minister with 1. -
LGBTQ Election 2015 Update1
LGBTQ EQUALITY & Northern Ireland’s Political Parties An independent survey General Election 2015 UPDATED VERSION (1) In April 2015 I emailed all the political parties in Northern Ireland that have candidates standing the the 2015 General Election. I enclosed a list of questions about their policies and active records on important lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans* and queer issues. The following pages contain the original information and questions sent to the parties, along with their replies and some additonal facts about each party’s record on LGBTQ rights. All replies are printed exactly as received, except where editied (with due respect and care for key facts) to keep them roughly around the requested 150 word limit. Parties are listed in the order their answers were returned. Where parties have not responded, I have researched their available policies, manifestos and records online and compiled some information. While most of us who identfy as LGBT or Q are unlikely to vote based on a party’s LGBTQ policies alone, it does help to know what each party thinks of some of the issues that effect our lives. And, more importantly, what they have already done and what they plan to do to tackle some of the serious problems caused by homophobia and transphobia; invisibility; institutionalised discrimination and exclusion. I hope that it will be updated and added to over time. This is an independent survey. It has no agenda other than to give each party an opportunity put on paper what they intend to do to help us build a more equal Northern Ireland in terms of sexual orientation and gender identity. -
2017 NI Assembly Election Manifesto
How to change Northern Ireland. For good. Manifesto 2017 Contents Contents Page 1 Introduction by Naomi Long Page 2 Executive Summary Page 3 Alliance leading change in the Assembly Page 5 Alliance leading change in a stable Executive Page 9 Political Reform Page 11 Shared Future and Equality Page 14 Mitigating the Impact of Brexit upon Northern Ireland Page 21 Economy and Skills Page 27 Justice Page 36 Education Page 44 Health and Social Services Page 48 Communities, Arts and Sport Page 60 Environment and Agriculture Page 68 Finance Page 74 Infrastructure Page 79 International Affairs Page 83 Our Legislative Priorities Page 85 Change. For good. 1 Introduction from Naomi Long Dear friend, Yet again, a Stormont government has collapsed. It happened under the UUP and SDLP, and now it’s happening under the DUP and Sinn Fein. While we didn’t choose to be here, it actually gives you an opportunity to make change, for good. It is your chance to take a stand against scandals, such as RHI, NAMA, Red Sky and links to paramilitaries. It is your chance to say enough is enough to the division that holds us back and costs us more per year than all of these other scandals put together. That division won’t go away if we keep voting along orange and green lines. We need to vote for people who will bring us together and make us stronger. Our last manifesto – released only nine months ago – was a five-year plan to transform our Government and our community. In the last eight months, we made real progress towards delivering that promised change and we have highlighted some of those achievements in this document. -
The Politics of Northern Ireland
The Politics of Unionism in Northern Ireland Dominic Bryan The British Isles • Settlers - Plantations in 16th- and 17th-century Ireland • 18th Century: Loyalty, Protestantism and Orangeism • Grand Orange Lodge of Ireland • Act of Union 1800: the idea of a United Kingdom • The landed class and industrial class and a working class • The empire, the bible and the crown • The Irish Unionist Party • The Orange Order • Identity: Britishness – Irishness – Ulster Origins of Unionism • Also the Official Unionist Party or simply the Unionist Party • Derived from the Irish Unionist Party in 19th Century • Foundation – the Ulster Unionist Council of 1905 • Key role of the Orange Order • The role of the gentry and upper-class • Edward Carson, James Craig and the UVF • 1921 – Northern Ireland • Prime Ministers: Craig, Andrews, Brooke, O’Neil and Chichester-Clarke and Faulkner. • Northern Ireland – a study in political control • Ian Paisley and Civil Rights Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) • 1972: The end of Stormont • 1973: splits over the Sunningdale Agreement • Faulkner v Harry West • 1974: Vanguard and the United Ulster Unionist Council • Leader James Molyneaux 1979-1995 • Anglo Irish Agreement • 1995 – 2005 David Trimble and the Belfast Agreement • Division and Defeat. • Leadership of Sir Reg Empey and Mike Nesbitt • Leadership of Robin Swan Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) • Ian Paisley – life and times • 1966 -1971 The Protestant Unionist Party • More Unionist, more Protestant and more working class • Growth in popularity in 1980’s and 1990’s • Staunch opposition to the 1998 Agreement – No talking to terrorists! • Took there seats in Government • 2007: Largest Party in Assembly • First Minister • Peter Robinson and Arlene Foster. -
Improving Access to Politics and Public Life for Disabled People
6 August 2020 PRESS RELEASE Improving access to politics and public life for disabled people People with hearing loss will be able to take a fuller part in public life with the installation of new videoconferencing facilities at the Northern Ireland Assembly. Strangford MLA Kellie Armstrong has championed the cause of inclusion for deaf and those with partial hearing. She has 40% hearing, wears hearing aids in both ears and lip reads. She came to the Equality Commission for help in putting her case for these arrangements to accommodate her needs to the Northern Ireland Assembly Commission. The Assembly Commission has recently upgraded its videoconferencing technology for use in Assembly Committee meetings. This will make it easier for MLAs and witnesses to join remotely and for deaf people to more easily participate. It has also issued guidance for witnesses appearing on remote link and for MLAs and others about how to use the new technology so that deaf people can follow proceedings. Ms Armstrong said: “I am really pleased with these arrangements which will benefit everyone with hearing difficulties. This is a step which has proved particularly useful during the Covid-19 pandemic but will still be useful in months and years to come. I believe that it’s a step forward for inclusion of deaf people and those with partial hearing and I’m grateful to the Equality Commission for its help in liaising on my behalf with the Assembly Commission to highlight particular needs of deaf people and those with partial hearing and to the Assembly Commission for incorporating these needs into its project, which had already commenced.” An Assembly Spokesperson said: “We are proud of our track record in enhancing and promoting the role of people with disabilities in public life, which is recognised through initiatives such as our Louder than Words charter mark. -
Official Report (Hansard)
Official Report (Hansard) Tuesday 25 February 2020 Volume 125, No 9 Session 2019-2020 Contents Executive Committee Business Budget Bill: Second Stage ................................................................................................................. 1 Oral Answers to Questions Finance .............................................................................................................................................. 28 Health ................................................................................................................................................ 37 Executive Committee Business Budget Bill: Second Stage (Continued) ............................................................................................. 46 Assembly Members Aiken, Steve (South Antrim) Kearney, Declan (South Antrim) Allen, Andy (East Belfast) Kelly, Ms Catherine (West Tyrone) Allister, Jim (North Antrim) Kelly, Mrs Dolores (Upper Bann) Anderson, Ms Martina (Foyle) Kelly, Gerry (North Belfast) Archibald, Dr Caoimhe (East Londonderry) Kimmins, Ms Liz (Newry and Armagh) Armstrong, Ms Kellie (Strangford) Long, Mrs Naomi (East Belfast) Bailey, Ms Clare (South Belfast) Lunn, Trevor (Lagan Valley) Barton, Mrs Rosemary (Fermanagh and South Tyrone) Lynch, Seán (Fermanagh and South Tyrone) Beattie, Doug (Upper Bann) Lyons, Gordon (East Antrim) Beggs, Roy (East Antrim) Lyttle, Chris (East Belfast) Blair, John (South Antrim) McAleer, Declan (West Tyrone) Boylan, Cathal (Newry and Armagh) McCann, Fra (West Belfast) Bradley, Maurice (East -
The Debate on Abortion in Northern Ireland
The Debate on Abortion in Northern Ireland: An examination of voices and frames in mainstream media Malene Bethina Nicolajsen MA THESIS Supervisor: Lise Rolandsen Agustin Master’s Programme in European Studies & Global Gender Studies Aalborg University Spring 2017 Abstract The topic of this thesis is an analysis of the public debate on abortion in Northern Ireland in terms of inclusion and exclusion of voices and frames. On December 15th 2015, a judge at the Belfast High Court ruled that the current abortion law in the province of Northern Ireland was incompatible with human rights, specifically when it came to abortion provisions in cases of fatal fetal abnormality and rape or incest. The Northern Ireland Assembly chose to vote on proposed amendments to the abortion law on February 10th 2016. This study examined the debate on abortion that took place in mainstream media in relation to the proposed changes to the law, with the scope limited to the time span between these two events. The problem formulation examined is: How does the public debate on abortion in Northern Ireland include some voices and frames and potentially exclude others? Previous studies on abortion in Northern Ireland have identified that the anti-abortion view is dominant in the province’ political institutions (see e.g. Smyth 2006; Thomson 2016;). There has been a tendency to draw on a common culture of pro-life that serve to make people of a different opinion refrain from voicing their views (see e.g. Fegan & Rebouche 2003). Furthermore, a study by Ferree et al. (2002) found that some actors were excluded from mainstream media in the public debate on abortion in both Germany and the United States. -
OFFICIAL REPORT (Hansard)
Ad Hoc Committee on the COVID-19 Response OFFICIAL REPORT (Hansard) Ministerial Statement: Economy 11 June 2020 NORTHERN IRELAND ASSEMBLY Ad Hoc Committee on the COVID-19 Response Ministerial Statement: Economy 11 June 2020 Members present for all or part of the proceedings: Mr Roy Beggs (Deputy Chairperson) Dr Steve Aiken Mr Jim Allister Dr Caoimhe Archibald Mr Cathal Boylan Mr Gerry Carroll Mr Pat Catney Mrs Diane Dodds Mr Gordon Dunne Ms Sinéad Ennis Mr Harry Harvey Mr David Hilditch Mr Chris Lyttle Mr Declan McAleer Mr Daniel McCrossan Mr Colin McGrath Mr Philip McGuigan Ms Sinead McLaughlin Mr Justin McNulty Mr Gary Middleton Mr Andrew Muir Mr Mike Nesbitt Mr Matthew O'Toole Mr John Stewart Ms Claire Sugden Miss Rachel Woods The Deputy Chairperson (Mr Beggs): Welcome to this meeting of the Ad Hoc Committee on the COVID-19 Response. Item 1 on the agenda is the minutes of proceedings of the previous meeting, which was held on 21 May. Members are asked to note those minutes, which have been agreed. The minutes from that meeting have been published in the Official Report and are available on the Committee's web page. Agenda item 2 is a statement from the Minister for the Economy. The Speaker received notification on 9 June that the Minister wished to make a statement to the Ad Hoc Committee at today's meeting. A copy of the statement that the Minister intends to make is in your pack. I welcome the Minister for the Economy to this meeting of the Committee. Before the Minister makes her statement, I remind members that, following it, there will be an opportunity to ask questions, not to 1 make speeches. -
Email with Community and Funding News
East Belfast Community Development Agency Developing Citizenship and Civic Pride in East Belfast Produced by EBCDA and supportedMAIL by Keeping the Community Sector in East Belfast Informed Issue 34 February - April 2013 Substance Misuse Funding information Health Development Social Investment Director’s Update Programme Fund (SIF) Directory of Information on An update on the support services upcoming funding The latest from Information on the development of East opportunities for EBCDA’s health implementation of the Belfast Network community groups connections project programme Centre/Templemore News Avenue School Page 2 Page 4 Page 5 Page 10 Page 12 Get connected with the community sector in East Belfast in 2013 East Belfast Community Workers Forum This forum has been running for over twelve years and currently meets on the third Tuesday at 12pm over lunch in a different community venue for each meeting. The agenda includes relevant speakers on upcoming programmes and plenty of time for information sharing and networking. East Belfast Ethnic Minority Support Network The network meets every month and provides an opportunity for community groups and statutory agencies working with ethnic minority groups to share information and work together. East Belfast Youth Providers Forum All youth workers are welcome to attend this re-launched forum which meets on the first Tuesday of each month. This is the main opportunity for youth workers from across the East to come together to discuss shared concerns and better ways of working. Volunteer Involving Organisations Network (members of the East Belfast Community Workers Forum at the January Are you the person who recruits and manages the volunteers in meeting in the Skainos building) your organisation? Whether it’s part of your job or you are a volunteer yourself, you’re invited to the new VIO Network run by There are many ways to get connected with other community groups EBCDA to gain some training on volunteer management, chat in East Belfast this year.