Type | Journal Article - Government and Opposition |
Title | The Federalization of Iraq and the Break-up of Sudan |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 47 |
Issue | 4 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2012 |
Page numbers | 481-516 |
URL | http://www-law-nyu-309756845.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com/sites/default/files/ECM_PRO_074073.pdf |
Abstract | IT IS AN HONOUR TO DELIVER THE LEONARD SCHAPIRO LECTURE, especially in Belfast. I am old enough to have known Professor Schapiro from the days of my first appointment at the London School of Economics and Political Science. More surprising than my age is that possession of one of Schapiro’s books once got me into potential trouble. In 1978, then a student in England, I returned to Northern Ireland at Christmas by catching the ferry from Stranraer. At the Scottish port, one of my heavy suitcases drew the attention of a detective. I was asked to open it. The two books most visible were Michael Farrell’s Northern Ireland: The Orange State and Leonard Schapiro’s The Communist Party of the Soviet Union. The detective showed absolutely no interest in The Orange State, presumably unaware that Farrell, now a member of President Michael Higgins’s Council of State in Dublin, was then Ireland’s most famous Trotskyist, and had been one of the most prominent leaders of the People’s Democracy. Instead, the detective focused on Schapiro’s book, and gravely enquired whether I was a communist. I laughed, replied negatively, and could not resist observing that Schapiro was no communist. The detective let me board the ferry, and I thought the episode closed, until the boat docked at Larne. As I walked down the gangway I was tapped on the shoulder. The detective had followed me over. Without arresting me, he asked me to accompany him to the local office of the Royal Ulster Constabulary, just beside the docks. There he asked me to open the suitcase again, lifted up Schapiro’s bookand pointed at it. The Ulsterman glanced at the open suitcase, looked witheringly at his Scots colleague, and said, ‘For Chrissake, Jock, the man’s a student.’ The episode taught me that when young and crossing a border – even a border within a Union – do not have a beard; it also taught me that the titles of books and lectures do not automatically signal their author’s views. |
» | Sudan - Population and Housing Census 2008 |