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The Orange Order in the Twentieth Century: A Comparative Perspective. The Orange Order. Formed 1795 in Northern Ireland Stands for loyalty to British Crown & Protestantism Associative cornerstone of British dominant ethnicity in Canada, N.I. Britannic ethno-nationalist
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The Orange Order in the Twentieth Century: A Comparative Perspective
The Orange Order • Formed 1795 in Northern Ireland • Stands for loyalty to British Crown & Protestantism • Associative cornerstone of British dominant ethnicity in Canada, N.I. • Britannic ethno-nationalist • Rapidly spread internationally
ESRC Research • Focuses on Orange Order and social change in the 20th century • Issue of how ethnic cores of nations deal with liberal modernity and globalisation • Orange Order as the associational glue behind dominant ethnicity in N.I., Canada, W.C. Scotland • Little study of the Order in the contemporary period
Main Research Questions • What factors cause per capita Orange membership strength to rise and fall over time and across place? (social question) • How effective is the Orange Order in determining policy change, and why does its power rise and fall over time and place? (political question)
Research Methodology • Quantitative: Compare Orange membership among Protestants with variables from census, police reports, history, polls. Over time and across county and ‘province’ (N.I., Scotland, Nfld., Ontario) • Qualitative: Compare Orange resolutions and organised political activity over time and place. Look at class profile of elite and membership over time. Interviews. • Sources: Previously unseen internal documents; census, polls, violence stats, valuation rolls, some newspapers
Canadian Orangeism • First parades in the 1810s • Grand Lodge formed - 1830 • Originally immigrant, later ‘native’ • Not Irish - a mixture of several British ethnic groups and some others
Social & Political Influence- Canada • Politically influential by 1867 • Many Tory MPs were members • Involved in most national issues • 1/3 of Ontario legislature was Orange in 1915 • 1/3 of Ontario males were members during 1870-1920 • Hundreds of thousands in the wider Orange fraternity as late as the 1950's
Political Influence in N. Ireland • Helped found Ulster Unionist Party • Guaranteed 15% of seats on Ulster Unionist Council • Virtually all Unionist MPs are, and have been, Orange members (Paisley an exception) • Orange Order an influential lobby
Twentieth Century Decline • Stable for 100+ years, sudden decline • Also declined in England and Australia/NZ • Did not decline in N. Ireland until later • Delayed or small declines in Newfoundland and Scotland • Why the pattern of decline? What does it portend for N. Ireland politics?
Theories of Fraternal Change • Beito: Decline in 1920’s as welfare state emerges • Emery: Decline in 1920’s or 30’s due to private insurance and expanded recreational options • Putnam: Depression caused decline, WWII boosted membership. Differences in ‘Social Capital’ between Generations explains most of post-1960 decline. • Culturalist: Decline of Protestant Religiosity (Bruce), Decline of Loyalty to Crown (Cheal), Decline of British-Protestant Ethnic Identity, Ecumenism • Events mobilise or de-mobilise members
Preliminary Research: Qualitative • Based on Interviews & Reports • Leaders and Rank-and-file members point to structural forces • But nearly all admit cultural pressures • Also speak of role of events • Institutional changes not seen as significant by members - though leaders think otherwise • Qualitative evidence inconclusive
Quantitative Research • Based on Previously Restricted Membership Data • Previous research has only tracked the number of lodges • Membership data highlights different patterns, contrasts with census and other data
International Orange Similarities • All jurisdictions experience growth until the 1920’s • All decline in the Depression years • All experience growth after World War II • All experience steady decline in recent decades • N.I; Scotland; Ontario; Newfoundland
International Differences • Membership decline sets in as early as the 1920’s in Ontario (1960 in NF) and decline in the 1920-39 period is sharper in Ontario • Membership decline in the post-1960 period has been quicker in Canada, while Northern Ireland and Scotland have declined at similar steady rates
Inter-County Patterns, N.I. Orangeism • General decline since membership peak in early 1960’s (mid-Ulster), or 50’s (East) • Height of the ‘Troubles’ (1969-72) boosted membership temporarily, as did Anglo-Irish Agreement and Drumcree • However, general trend is a steady decline • Urban areas suffer heavier declines, even taking into account population flows.
Inter-Fraternal Patterns • Masons appear to have outdrawn Orange Order from late forties until late sixties in N.I. And since the 1920’s in Ontario ONT; NI 1 • Orange Order has withstood post-1970 declines better than Masonic NI2 • Inter-County Patterns in Masonic match those of Orange • IOOF declined in step with Orange in Ontario ONT
Summary • Great deal of similarity in shape of historical patterns of membership across nations and fraternities • Great deal of difference between places and fraternities in terms of slope of rise/decline in membership
Statistical Summary – Pooled TSCS • Economic factors less important than cultural, events in between • Scotland and Ontario: Irish-Protestant % key; Catholic competition also important, but less so • N. Ireland and Ontario: Protestant denomination important • 'social capital' theory seems to have some weight in Northern Ireland, but none in Scotland
Preliminary Statistical Tests – Across Time • Denominational balance (esp. rise of Methodism and Other Protestant sects) important during 1901-71. • Orangeism in N.I. And Scotland responded to RC population growth until 1970, but not since then • Political events (Troubles, Peace Agreements, Drumcree) have been a factor in N.I. post-1970 • Rate of Protestant fatalities have had little impact in N.I. since 1970 • High-school education appears correlated with membership decline in Ontario during 1955-75 • Still more work needed in this and other areas
Conclusion • Orangeism is a worldwide movement historically strongest in Ulster and eastern Canada • Orangeism’s rise owed a lot to both Irish-Protestant emigration and inter-ethnic conflict with a Catholic ethnie. Relatively Catholic counties in N.I., Ontario and Scotland have more ‘Orange’ Protestants
Conclusion II • The role of economic change is minimal during the period 1891-1971 in all areas • The role of events is important, but less so than cultural change. Strong evidence against ‘contact’ hypothesis • Some evidence appears to support Putnam thesis (N.I. but not Scotland), though more work needed with respect to generation, as well as time-series analysis • No definitive answer yet as to why Orangeism is in decline over past 20-30 years
ESRC Project Web Sites • http://www.kpdata.com/epk/subtheme_A__OO_in_20th_c.html (Fellowship) • http://www.devolution.ac.uk/Patterson2.htm (Devolution Programme Grant, with Henry Patterson)