Reflections and Recommendations on the Identity and Language (Northern Ireland) Bill 2022 / Machnaimh agus Moltá ar an mBille Féiniúlachta agus Teanga (Tuaisceart Éireann) 2022
Citation:
Róisín Costello, Reflections and Recommendations on the Identity and Language (Northern Ireland) Bill 2022 / Reflections and Recommendations on the Identity and Language (Northern Ireland) Bill 2022 / Machnaimh agus Moltá ar an mBille Féiniúlachta agus Teanga (Tuaisceart Éireann) 2022, 2023Download Item:


Abstract:
The 2022 Bill represents a ‘first generation’ piece of minority language
legislation in that it neither seeks to impose strict, rights-based standards
nor punitive deterrent sanctions. In this respect, the legislation falls short of
the legislative standards promised under the St Andrew’s Agreement and
which activists within the jurisdiction have called for as well as the legal
provisions that COMEX has urged must be implemented in order for the
United Kingdom to comply with its obligations under the ECRML. This
divergence was, however, characterised by participants as being part of
the necessary compromise to ensure that Irish is not viewed as an
externally imposed obstacle and does not retrench resistance to minority
languages.
The Bill as it was introduced before the House of Lords lacks clarity in both
its objectives and the measures and mechanisms through which it
proposes to achieve them, and is characterised by a recourse to political
approval and general policy which lacks the specificity of comparable
legislation in other jurisdictions in the UK and on the island of Ireland. The
main function of the Bill, and its incontrovertible success, is its provision of
legal and institutional recognition of Irish as a language within Northern
Ireland. This may, in certain respects, seem to be a moderate, or even
insufficient, achievement. However, it is significant for three reasons: First, it provides a new status quo in accordance with which it may
gradually become not only unremarkable but expected to encounter Irish
in institutional settings and in which engagement with the language may,
as a result, become progressively apolitical. Second, and relatedly, the Bill
affirms the existence of a multilingual population within the jurisdiction and
recognises their entitlement (albeit not in the language of rights) to affirm
their linguistic identity not only in private spaces but in public ones. These
are both significant developments on an individual basis for Irish speakers
but also at a societal level for advancing reconciliation in a manner which Third, and finally, the
proposed legislation would provide an institutional model which can be
developed further by amendment to comply more fully with the
requirements of the ECRML. In this respect, the proposed legislation may
operate as a minimum benchmark which will be hard to displace.
Sponsor
Grant Number
Irish Research Council (IRC)
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/costelriDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: Costello, Róisín
Type of material:
ReportCollections:
Availability:
Full text availableKeywords:
Irish language, Legislation, Irish language, Northern Ireland, Minority languages, LegislationSubject (TCD):
Identities in Transformation , Making Ireland , Language RightsLicences: