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Breaking News :
New research on diversity and impact of religious belief in 21st-century Ireland
The Irish are very welcoming, but not very open to diversity
Boris Johnson is our biggest threat to peace in Ireland and Europe alike
All not what it seems behind creche doors
There may be troubles ahead...
Lunar landing or loony conspiracy?
Nigeria needs a peaceful solution
Soccer really is a sport for all
Nepalese potato kabab
Book Review
"art" için sonuçlar gösteriliyor
In Finland, the murderer is the hero
In early December a terrible massacre took place in Imatra, a small town in eastern Finland. Three women were about to leave a pub when a young man started to shoot at them in ambush.
Irish Times ‘alt-right’ article sends online racism reports ‘off the charts’
The iReport.ie racist incident reporting system says it logged 37 reports of media racism relating to the recent Irish Times opinion piece on the so-called ‘alt-right’ movement by Nicholas Pell, an American freelance writer living in Ireland.
Year of the rooster a chance for better links with China
Every member of the Chinese community in Ireland should work for better and stronger Sino-Irish relations.
International Protection Office takes over refugee applications
The new International Protection Office (IPO) has opened for business, the Department of Justice has announced.
New year means new start for Ireland’s many cultures
From The burning of scarecrows, kissing at the stroke of midnight and swinging fireballs, to gobbling grapes and throwing bread – when it comes to new year traditions, strange and interesting things happen all over the world. And even apart from its increasingly diverse population, Ireland is not exempt from such interesting observances. Celebrating in a pub on New Year’s Eve is just the thing as far as Brian Dowling is concerned.
Public engagement training seminars now under way in Fingal
The Fingal Public Participation Network (FPPN) held its second training seminar on ‘understanding local government and influencing policy’ as part of its autumn training programme recently.
Apply early for re-entry visas to avoid disappointment
Ahead of Christmas and New Year holiday season, the Department of Justice advises non-Irish nationals who require re-entry visas for visits abroad to apply early to avoid delay and disappointment.
A visa-free solution?
I often follow South African news and recently read an article that the country raised the minimum wage for domestic workers by almost one rand an hour with effect from 1 December.
Change in the air for African politics
In early December, Ghanaians voted out President John Dramani Mahama, who became leader following the death of John Atta Mills in 2012, and who failed to live up to his promises throughout a four-year tenure characterised by dwindling economic fortunes and rising corruption. His upcoming replacement by 72-year-old Nana Akufo-Addo, a human rights lawyer who won 53.8 per cent of the votes, is being viewed as part of a movement in the continent.
Charles Laffiteau's Bigger Picture
Donald Trump won the US presidential election because he succeeded in feeding the same unrealistic expectations of mature white voters with lower levels of education that Michael Gove, Boris Johnson and Nigel Farage stoked in order to persuade their British counterparts to vote for Brexit. Both Trump and the Brexit champions blamed the declining economic fortunes of their countries’ blue-collar workers on immigration and companies shifting manufacturing jobs abroad
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