Economic Thought and the Irish Question 1817-1970CUP Archive, 1960 |
Contents
THE LAND SYSTEM | 15 |
THE Absentee LANDLORD | 72 |
THE POOR | 86 |
The Politicians Contribution | 99 |
The Course of Policyto 1845 p | 105 |
The Course of Policy18451849 p | 112 |
Thought and Policy on Irish Poor Laws 18501870 p | 131 |
PUBLIC WORKS | 159 |
The System of Administration of Public Works in Ireland | 168 |
EMIGRATION | 203 |
72 | 211 |
86 | 231 |
CONCLUSION | 239 |
The Facts and the Possibilities p | 247 |
159 | 254 |
Common terms and phrases
absenteeism advocated agriculture Anglesey argument B.M. Add Bank Bessborough Bill Britain capital Clarendon classical economists Colonial Commission Commissioners condition cottiers distress drainage economic Edinburgh employment England English Famine farms favour fixity of tenure funds G. C. Lewis Gladstone Government Grand Jury Hansard Horton improvement increase Incumbered Estates industry introduced Ireland Dublin Ireland London Irish Emigration Irish land Irish landlords Irish Poor Law Isaac Butt J. S. Mill John Stuart Mill labour Land Question legislation Letter Lord John Russell Malthus McCulloch measure ment Mill Minutes of Evidence Monteagle Monteagle Papers Nicholls Parliament Peel Political Economy Poor in Ireland population principle problem proposals proprietors reclamation reform relief remedy rent Report Ricardo Right Honourable Russell Papers scheme Scrope Select Committee Senior Spring Rice tenant-right tion Torrens Ulster wages Wakefield waste lands Whig Wilmot Horton workhouse
Popular passages
Page 270 - Notes of a Traveller. 8vo. price 12s. Laing's (S.) Observations on the Social and Political State of the European People in 1848 and 1849: Being the Second Series of Notes of a Traveller.