O'Kane, Eammon2008-05-202008-05-202004Contemporary British History, 18(1): 78-991361946210.1080/1361946042000217310http://hdl.handle.net/2436/27183In the early 1990s the British and Irish governments moved away from the policy of attempting to marginalise the IRA and Sinn Féin to enticing republicanism into mainstream politics. This article examines why the two governments made this apparent shift in policy. The British and Irish governments were persuaded to change their policy on Northern Ireland due to a variety of factors, all of which need to be examined if the origins of the peace process are to be understood. The article questions existing explanations that portray the origins of the peace process and the Downing Street Declaration as simply a victory for Irish nationalism without taking account of the concessions secured by the British government from the Irish during the protracted negotiations. (Ingenta)enIrish historyBritish history20th centuryGovernment policyRepublicanismPolitical historyPeace negotiationReconciliationSinn FéinDowning Street Declaration 1993Anglo-Irish Relations and the Northern Ireland Peace Process: From Exclusion to Inclusion.Journal articleContemporary British History