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Timothy M. O'Neil received
his Ph.D. in European Labor History from Wayne State
University in 1999. He joined the faculty at Central
Michigan University in 1998 as a visiting assistant
professor and in 2003 as an assistant professor. He also
served as the book review editor of Michigan
Historical Review from 2000-2005.
Research Interests
Professor O'Neil's research interests are centered in
the European labor movement, with a focus on Irish
working class both at home and abroad. At present he is
examining the relationship between socialism and
nationalism in twentieth-century Ireland. In addition he
has studied transatlantic labor migration, specifically
examining how emigration impacted sending communities in
Europe and identifying specific labor migration networks
from Europe to North America.
Recent
Publications
"Handing Away the Trump Card? Peadar O'Donnell, Fianna
Fáil, and the Non-Payment of Land Annuities Campaign,
1926–32," New
Hibernia Review/Iris Eireannach Nua 12:1 (Spring 2008):
19-40.
"Patrick H. O'Brien: the Workingman's Advocate: The
Copper Country Years, 1868-1922," in New Perspectives
on Michigan's Copper Country, ed. Kim Hoagland and
Terry Reynolds (Houghton: Michigan Technological
University [forthcoming, 2005]): 138-165.
"'We Knew Where Our Sympathies Were:' Social and
Economic Views in On Another Man's Wound," New
Hibernia Review/Iris Eireannach Nua 7:3 (Autumn 2003):
140-144.
"Miners in Migration: The Case of Nineteenth-Century
Irish and Irish American Copper Miners," in New
Directions in Irish American History, ed. Kevin
Kenny (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2003):
61-78.
"Miners in Migration: The Case of Nineteenth-Century
Irish and Irish American Copper Miners,"
Eire/Ireland: A Journal of Irish Studies 35, 3,
(2001): 124-140.
"Nationalism, Socialism and the Irish Revolution,
1910-1936," Saothar: A Journal of Irish Labour
History 21 (2000): 68-69.
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