How Ireland's LGBTQ+ Youth Movement was Built: Civil Society in the Pursuit of Social Justice
This book offers a unique insider perspective from a queer author and activist who was centrally involved in Ireland’s journey from 1993, the year when homosexuality was decriminalised, to 2015, when it became the first country in which marriage equality was enacted by popular vote. It is the first comprehensive study of the impact of LGBTQ+ youth civil society as a leading force on Irish public policy change.

Interdisciplinary in nature, it uses both activist and academic frames to reassess LGBTQ+ activism histories. It draws on personal, historical and policy analysis to provide a comprehensive account of how civil society can drive progressive change in difficult conditions.

Essential reading for understanding the significant public policy changes that have occurred in Ireland, this book provides deep insight into the dynamics of organised social change over long periods of time and offers lessons for future work in this area.

1146165761
How Ireland's LGBTQ+ Youth Movement was Built: Civil Society in the Pursuit of Social Justice
This book offers a unique insider perspective from a queer author and activist who was centrally involved in Ireland’s journey from 1993, the year when homosexuality was decriminalised, to 2015, when it became the first country in which marriage equality was enacted by popular vote. It is the first comprehensive study of the impact of LGBTQ+ youth civil society as a leading force on Irish public policy change.

Interdisciplinary in nature, it uses both activist and academic frames to reassess LGBTQ+ activism histories. It draws on personal, historical and policy analysis to provide a comprehensive account of how civil society can drive progressive change in difficult conditions.

Essential reading for understanding the significant public policy changes that have occurred in Ireland, this book provides deep insight into the dynamics of organised social change over long periods of time and offers lessons for future work in this area.

41.95 Pre Order
How Ireland's LGBTQ+ Youth Movement was Built: Civil Society in the Pursuit of Social Justice

How Ireland's LGBTQ+ Youth Movement was Built: Civil Society in the Pursuit of Social Justice

by Michael Barron
How Ireland's LGBTQ+ Youth Movement was Built: Civil Society in the Pursuit of Social Justice

How Ireland's LGBTQ+ Youth Movement was Built: Civil Society in the Pursuit of Social Justice

by Michael Barron

Paperback(First Edition)

$41.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Available for Pre-Order. This item will be released on August 19, 2025

Related collections and offers


Overview

This book offers a unique insider perspective from a queer author and activist who was centrally involved in Ireland’s journey from 1993, the year when homosexuality was decriminalised, to 2015, when it became the first country in which marriage equality was enacted by popular vote. It is the first comprehensive study of the impact of LGBTQ+ youth civil society as a leading force on Irish public policy change.

Interdisciplinary in nature, it uses both activist and academic frames to reassess LGBTQ+ activism histories. It draws on personal, historical and policy analysis to provide a comprehensive account of how civil society can drive progressive change in difficult conditions.

Essential reading for understanding the significant public policy changes that have occurred in Ireland, this book provides deep insight into the dynamics of organised social change over long periods of time and offers lessons for future work in this area.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781447368700
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Publication date: 08/19/2025
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 198
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x (d)

About the Author

Michael Barron is an Irish and international social justice advocate, author and social commentator. In Ireland, he founded the country's first national LGBTQ+ youth advocacy organisation and campaigned for LGBTQ+ youth inclusion in education, health and public policy, marriage equality and the secularisation of Ireland’s education system. He is a Council of Europe expert of Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity and a human rights grant maker.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction

2. Context: LGBTQ+ Youth in the crosshairs

3. Building a Civil Society Platform

4. Community Youth Work: the BeLonG To Model

5. A New Narrative : Queer Optimism

6. Alliances and Political Power

7. Self-Organised Community Model for Policy Change

8. Defending Our Civil Society Platforms

9. Conclusion

References

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews