The Dunnes payments scandal, Charles Haugheyy and contemporary Irish political culture
Authors: Sherriff, Andrew; O'Brien, Gary; Punch, Eddie
Source: Crime, Law and Social Change, Volume 30, Number 1, July 1998 , pp. 41-63(23)
Publisher: Springer
Abstract:
This article offers interpretation and commentary regarding the Tribunal of Inquiry (Dunnes Payments) which was established to look into large sums given by Ben Dunne, a leading Irish businessman, to senior Irish politicians, most notably the former Taoiseach, Charles Haughey, and Michael Lowry who was a cabinet minister at the time. The article attempts to place this affair within the general context of contemporary Irish political culture, and the relatively unique, `cult of the personality' personified by Charles Haughey. The article notes that it has been the convention to assume that Irish political culture reflects features commonly associated with the prevalence of traditional and conservative social and political values. The article argues that Irish political culture is now unmistakably in step with the trends observed throughout the European Union, while at the same time acknowledging that certain particular factors still remain distinctive. Despite Haughey's long tenure as the most powerful politician of his day, the privileges accorded by his lofty position alone cannot fully account for his political actions nor, in particular, his dubious ethics in relation to his personal finances. The article considers the contents of the McCracken Tribunal itself and concludes with a brief discussion of the Tribunal findings, the nature of corruption in Irish politics and the corresponding implications for Irish political culture.Document Type: Research article
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1008340519183
Publication date: 1998-07-01
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Law , Social & Public Welfare
- By this author: Sherriff, Andrew ; O'Brien, Gary ; Punch, Eddie

Shopping cart
Receive new issue alert