This book is an examination of issues in relation to perceived Irish / Anglo-Irish cultural identities, culture, political prejudice and the development of pathological sectarianism, evolving out of perceived rational and irrational fears. The basis for this transitional justice peace process blueprint, is a set of base point constitutional and institutional, community development proposals and suggestions, underpinned by the authors informed ideas on transitional justice and community psychology, in relation to a managed change process. This book aims to build on the authors submission made on the 30 / 10 / 2013 to the independent chair DR. Richard Haass and vice chair Megan Sullivan. The panel of parties in the NI Executive calls for submissions addressing the three issues: parades and protests, flags symbols and emblems, and related matters; and dealing with the past. It is intended also for the purpose of addressing some of the outstanding parts of the Belfast Agreement and some of the issues which underpin and may be impeding the full implementation of the Belfast Agreement? The aim is to develop and go some way in understanding, the evolutionary linear community psychology perspective via an attempt at some understandings in terms of individuals, family, groups, identity, culture, class ; social economic, institutions, conflict, social control, and social change, in the context of the Anglo-Irish /NI conflict. The need for some realistic clarity and a foundation understanding in relation to the historic developments of perceptions of cultural identities and the psychosocial situational positioning in terms of the real time crystallisation of NI citizens perceptions, leading up and during and emerging out of the conflict, as a basis for developing a blueprint for a transitional justice, human rights, community psychology approach to enabling and facilitating a managed change process, aimed at acknowledging the origins of some aspects of Northern Irish cultural identities and enabling a social cohesion and community integration underpinned and supported by a Northern Irish Home Rule Entrenched Bill of Rights and Freedoms. A transitional justice community psychology perspective approach aimed understanding and acknowledging the embedded cultural social and emotional cognitions underpinning the Anglo- Irish / NI Conflict and the difficulties and self-made obstacles in relation to engaging a managed change process. A community psychology imperative aimed at acknowledging the existence of an array of individual and community group reinforced family psychodynamic and social psychological processes at work, in relation to perceived historic Northern Irish identities and cultures, contributing to individual and community indifferences and systemic institutional failures. The importance of attempting to understand and in the first instance grasping the relevance of acknowledging the existence of the undercurrent psychological individual and community processes aimed at gaining a better understanding as to the extent that they may have contributed to the range of beliefs, values and attitudes and behavioural indifferences as to the respective Northern Irish individual and community political decisions and actions, emanating out of a context involving an external situational positioning of individuals in community and institutional settings, underpinned by perceived cultural identity issues, family psychodynamic developmental processes, social psychological ; social representations and group processes. The development of attitudes, behaviours producing internal and external experiences. Embedded formulations based on identity, cultural perceptions, responsible for producing emotional and social cognitions. Theses emotional and social cognitive processes forming the basis for cultural sectarianism, political prejudice and lawful and unlawful discrimination?
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