Monthly Archives: April 2025

Book Review: ‘Burn Them Out! A History of Fascism and the Far Right in Ireland’ by Pádraig Óg Ó Ruairc

Many will have been shocked at the violent turn taken by anti-immigration protests in Ireland in recent years, with calls to ‘burn them out’ of their emergency accommodation. Indeed, there have been several cases of arson. But, this is not the first time these tactics have been used by the far-right here. Assault, arson and even murder were all part of the toolkit of the Blueshirts in the 1930s.

While it may have lain relatively dormant since the mid-20th century, Ireland has a long history of far-right agitation, including by more-or-less explicit adherents to fascist ideology. This history is the subject  of ‘Burn them out!’,  a new book by Pádraig Óg Ó Ruairc.

*** A version of this book review was first published in The Irish Times on 12 April 2025 ***

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‘The old is dying and the new cannot be born’

Book Review: ‘Abundance’, by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson, ‘The Care Economy’, by Tim Jackson, ‘The Measure of Progress’, by Diane Coyle

Finance. ClimatePandemic. Inflation. Housing. Geopolitics. We are nearly two decades into what has been termed a global “perma-crisis”. Antonio Gramsci, the Italian communist imprisoned by Mussolini, famously said that “the crisis consists precisely in the fact that the old is dying and the new cannot be born; in this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear”.

If it was the 2008 global financial crisis that shattered any illusions of uninterrupted progress, we are still witnessing all manner of “morbid symptoms”: from Brexit to Trump to the rise of the far right and the apparent accommodation of revanchist Russia. Three ambitious new books take a look at what ails the political economy of liberal democracy, and how we can chart a course to a better future.

*** A version of this book review was first published in The Irish Times on 29 March 2025 ***

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