Additional Resources on Northern Ireland
CAIN Web Service (Conflict Archive on the INternet)
"This site contains information and source material on ‘the Troubles' in Northern Ireland from 1968 to the present. There is also information on politics in the region and Northern Ireland society. New material is added regularly to the site and there are also frequent updates, so information on particular pages may change. The information at this site is divided into a number of main sections that are accessible by clicking on the 'button' icons below."
BBC: A State Apart
"A State Apart is an interactive chronicle covering the 30 years of conflict in Northern Ireland. This site brings it up to date and takes it beyond the period of the Troubles to an analysis of the Belfast / Good Friday Agreement."
BBC: Northern Ireland Learning
This website by the BBC contains some excellent historical information on Northern Ireland.
Committee on the Administration of Justice in Northern Ireland (CAJ)
The Committee on the Administration of Justice (CAJ) was established in 1981 and is an independent non-governmental organisation affiliated to the International Federation of Human Rights. The Committee seeks to secure the highest standards in the administration of justice in Northern Ireland by ensuring that the government complies with its responsibilities in international human rights law.
Be the Change: Upstanders for Human Rights (Martin O'Brien)
Facing History and Ourselves' interactive website for students, "Be the Change: Upstanders for Human Rights," profiles five past winners of the Reebok Human Rights Award. One of the featured upstanders is Martin O'Brien from Northern Ireland. O'Brien commitment to peace and non-violence has made a difference in Northern Ireland's road towards healing and reconciliation.
International League for Human Rights: Bloody Sunday Investigation
"The event known as ‘Bloody Sunday' occurred on January 30, 1972, when British paratroopers fired on Catholic demonstrators in Londonderry (known as Derry), Northern Ireland, leaving 13 dead and 13 wounded. Human rights advocates and lawyers in Northern Ireland and Great Britain immediately publicized their concern that excessive state force had been used to put down a citizens' demonstration."

