David Trimble, Tony Blair and John Hume: campaigning for a yes vote on the Good Friday Agreement in May 1998.
Chris Bacon/PA Archive
The Good Friday Agreement was choreographed 20 years ago to maximise support for the deal.
Mo Mowlam, secretary of state for Northern Ireland at the time of the Good Friday Agreement.
PA Archive
In a series of short audio clips, four academics talk about the key figures involved in making the Good Friday Agreement of April 1998 possible.
LunaseeStudios/Shutterstock.com
To mark the 20th anniversary of the agreement that brought peace to Northern Ireland, this episode of the podcast looks at its history, its legacy and the impact of Brexit on its future.
A Presbyterian church in Belfast.
via shutterstock.com
Twenty years after the Good Friday Agreement, churches have tended to marginalise the mavericks who helped bring about peace.
PA Archive
The citizens of Northern Ireland were ready for peace long before national leaders signed on the dotted line.
Theresa May delivers her Manson House speech on Brexit in early March 2018.
Chris J. Ratcliffe/Pool/EPA
An expert in trust assesses how it comes into play while finding a solution that avoids a hard border for Northern Ireland.
The so-called ‘hooded men in Belfast, March 20, 2018.
EPA/Paul McErlane
The European Court of Human Rights has rejected a call to reconsider whether interrogation techniques used in the 1970s against men interned in Northern Ireland amounted to torture.
No desire to return to the borders of the past.
Aidan Crawley/EPA
Other EU countries have flexible legal arrangements for their own special territories – something similar for Northern Ireland is not impossible.
Roaming free. The current Irish border.
Mark Marlow/PA Wire
Options to avoid a hard border are on the table, but they remain unpalatable to Theresa May’s government.
EPA/Olivier Hoslet
Michel Barnier has published a 100-page document outlining how the EU sees Brexit happening. And there are some pretty controversial suggestions.
PA/Michael Cooper
Talks between the DUP and Sinn Féin have collapsed again, but power sharing isn’t over.
LSE library
Ireland was quick to elect a woman member of parliament, but it’s been slow going thereafter.
Shuttertstock
Teachers have a legal duty to promote British values, but what exactly are they?
“Peidiwch â cholli!”
ESB Professional
Should the teacher be a sage on the stage or a guide on the side? Neither, it seems.
Derry Girls.
Channel4/Aidan Monaghan/Hat Trick
Derry Girls is nostalgic but it’s also a truthful and funny representation of teenage girls growing up during The Troubles.
Building peace from the bottom up.
Paul J Martin/Shutterstock.com
Brexit negotiations threaten the peacebuilding efforts that have taken place since the Good Friday Agreement.
Michael Cooper/PA
The Northern Irish party were horrified at the suggestion that Brexit might mean different customs rules. But when it comes to women’s rights, it’s a different story.
A welcome to refugees from local school children in Belfast.
Niall Carson/PA Archive
Northern Ireland lacks an integration strategy for refugees.
May and Juncker: reaching for agreement.
Olivier Hoslet/EPA
Theresa May has reached an agreement with the EU that will enable her to proceed to the second stage of Brexit negotiations. Here’s what it all means.
Reaching for peace.
Steven McAuley/PA Archive
Brexit negotiations have revealed a clear lack of appreciation for the power of symbolism in Northern Irish politics.