Now showing items 1-7 of 7

    • Beginnings of state care for mentally ill in ireland 

      Williamson, A (Economic & Social StudiesDUBLIN, 1970)
      The purpose in this paper is to examine the background and development of state care for the mentally ill in Ireland. Today, with a rapidly growing awareness of the needs of people with psychiatric problems, many agencies, ...
    • Empirical study of age structure of irish population 

      Walsh, B (Economic & Social StudiesDUBLIN, 1970)
      The economic and social consequences of a population's age structure are far-reaching. The proportion of a country's population in the active age groups largely determines the relationship between productivity per worker ...
    • 3rd sinn fein party - 1923-1926 

      Pyne, P (Economic & Social StudiesDUBLIN, 1970)
      The Republican party that was organized under the name 'Sinn Fein' after the end of the civil war, while initially relatively successful, failed to obtain the majority support essential, not only for the implementation of ...
    • Productivity, earnings and composition of labour - irish-manufacturing-industries, 1953-1966 

      Kennedy, Kieran A.; Dowling, Brendan R. (Economic & Social StudiesDUBLIN, 1970)
      In a paper read recently to the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society oflreland by one of the present authors,1 differences in the growth of labour productivity in Irish manufacturing industries over the period 1953 to ...
    • Survey of some delinquent boys in an irish-industrial-school and reformatory 

      Hart, I (Economic & Social StudiesDUBLIN, 1970)
      The research aimed at discovering specific social and psychological characteristics of institutionalized delinquent boys in the Irish Republic. Various researchers had considered separate aspects of juvenile delinquency ...
    • Status inequalities within families in relation to their structural differences 

      Hannan, D (Economic & Social StudiesDUBLIN, 1970)
      The nuclear family, not the individual, is regarded as the basic unit of social stratification systems: a nuclear family being usually defined as a man and wife, with their dependent children, sharing a common domicile. ...
    • Changing regional pattern in ireland 

      Baker, T; Ross, M (Economic & Social StudiesDUBLIN, 1970)
      Draw a line down the Shannon, bend and extend it to the north east to include Longford and the Ulster counties, add Kerry and perhaps West Cork, and one obtains the traditional dividing line of Ireland. 'The West', the ...