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This book has had a long period of gestation. Initially I conceived it as a means to stitch together a few different articles that I had written (on peace and conflict in Northern Ireland, on racism and on immigration) in order to create a book-length study that would involve relatively little effort from me. Very early on, however, it became clear that I was guilty of the same flaw that I discerned in the bulk of writing on Northern Ireland; namely, the tendency to intellectually partition the study of sectarianism from the study of racism. I realised that I would have to engage more seriously with the literature on sectarianism and other racisms and to rethink this material in ways that had not been done previously. I am indebted to a number of different authors for helping me to rethink sectarianism and other racisms in Northern Ireland.
Steve Garner’s book, Racisms, is not the first to present the idea that there are many different forms of racism, but he presents the idea so clearly in the book that it made the conceptual leap of seeing sectarianism as a form of racism so much easier. Making this link was also helped by two veteran writers on Northern Ireland, Robbie McVeigh and Bill Rolston, who have written perceptively about both racism and sectarianism. Alistair Bonnett’s book, Anti-racism, was invaluable for clearly spelling out many of the ways in which the term covers a whole range of different, often mutually incompatible, ways of conceiving the problem of racisms.
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