What’s Mined is Ours!
Date:1973
Organisation: Union of Students in Ireland
Type:Pamphlet
View: View Document
Discuss:Comments on this document
Subjects: Natural Resources

Please note:  The Irish Left Archive is provided as a non-commercial historical resource, open to all, and has reproduced this document as an accessible digital reference. Copyright remains with its original authors. If used on other sites, we would appreciate a link back and reference to The Irish Left Archive, in addition to the original creators. For re-publication, commercial, or other uses, please contact the original owners. If documents provided to The Irish Left Archive have been created for or added to other online archives, please inform us so sources can be credited.

Commentary From The Cedar Lounge Revolution

18th February 2019

Many thanks to the person who forwarded this to the Archive.

This document – an updated version of an earlier document, issued by the Union of Students in Ireland in 1973 – subtitled “The case for the retention and development of Irish Minerals under Public Ownership” provides evidence of the activist approach of the USI in the 1970s on a broad range of areas.

Indeed the Introduction notes that ‘the USI was amongst the first national organisations to raise the now controversial issue of the development and ownership of Irish mines. Successive National Congresses have called for public ownership and democratic control fo the mineral resources of Ireland. With other sections of the community this Union has been calling for equal educational opportunities and adequate educational facilities and has received answers from successive Ministers of Education to the effect that the country simply cannot afford ‘to cherish all the children fo the nation equally’. A fraction fo the profit from the Navan deposit alone would give the present government the financial means to effect a revolution in the education system throughout this country’.

Interestingly the President of USI at this point was Pat Rabbitte and the Deputy President Kieran Mulvey and the Foreword by them and Pat Brady, the Education Officer argues that the update was necessary due ‘to a demand from the general public…[demonstrating] the wise of many people to discover more of the facts about the true potential of Ireland’s mineral resources’. It notes that David Giles, Colm Regan and Alan Wallace ‘did the research for this booklet.

More from Union of Students in Ireland

Union of Students in Ireland in the archive


Comments

You can also join the discussion on The Cedar Lounge Revolution

No Comments yet.

Add a Comment

Formatting Help

Comments can be formatted in Markdown format . Use the toolbar to apply the correct syntax to your comment. The basic formats are:

**Bold text**
Bold text

_Italic text_
Italic text

[A link](http://www.example.com)
A link