Boston Globe urges release of IRA tapes from oral history project
15 August 2011
Say tapes could help solve murder case
The Boston Globe has called on Boston College to release tapes form an Irish oral history project that they claim could help solve an old murder case in Northern Ireland.
The tape sought is one of Dolours Price, now a leading dissident and being held on suspicion of helping cause the death of two British soldiers last year.
However, the Boston College tapes being sought do not refer to that murder but events long ago in Northern Ireland.
The college has refused to produce the tapes,saying they were made on the understanding that they would be kep strictly confidential and open only to researchers
The Globe disagrees.“Boston College argues that releasing Price’s testimony could having a chilling effect on oral historians everywhere. But carving out a special legal exception for oral history isn’t consistent with judicial interpretations of the First Amendment,” the editorial wrote.
“ The courts have set high standards for issuing subpoenas to journalists - whose role is specifically protected by the First Amendment and who serve a watchdog function in our democracy - but even reporters must testify under certain conditions. The benefits of oral history are more diffuse. And if the US government refuses to honor this British request, it could reasonably expect
Britain to put up similar roadblocks down the line - at a time when all forms of international cooperation on terrorism are matters of life and death.
Supporters of Boston College say the subpoena itself could be politically motivated, since Price’s testimony might contain information damaging to Northern Ireland nationalist leader Gerry Adams.
And the college suggests that Price and her interviewer could be in danger of retribution for talking at all. If those dangers are real, the British government should offer reasonable security.
But potential threats and conspiracy theories don’t change the fact that murders, no matter how old, are worth pursuing. If a university in Ireland had information that could help solve, say, a cold-case murder from civil rights-era Mississippi, American authorities would want access to those file - and would be justified in seeking them.” the editorial concludes.
By HILDA HIGGINS,
IrishCentral.com Staff Writer
Number of Visits: 5737
The latest
- The Third Regiment: Memoirs of an Iraqi Prisoner of War Doctor - 36
- Third Theory: Covering up the gaps in the document with oral narration
- 100 Questions/35
- Javad Poyanfar's Memories
- Report of the 15th Oral History Conference; Religion and Culture -1
- Third Regiment: Memoirs of an Iraqi Prisoner of War Doctor – 35
- Rahim Afshar's Memories
- The Story of the First Sacred Defense Book Award
Most visited
- The Story of the First Sacred Defense Book Award
- 100 Questions/ 34
- Third Regiment: Memoirs of an Iraqi Prisoner of War Doctor – 34
- Oral History and Social Resilience in Hard Times
- Rahim Afshar's Memories
- Report of the 15th Oral History Conference; Religion and Culture -1
- Third Regiment: Memoirs of an Iraqi Prisoner of War Doctor – 35
- Javad Poyanfar's Memories
Validation: Challenges and Necessities
Where does truth stand in oral history? How can the correctness of a narrative be recognized? Does fact-checking matter? If there is exaggeration in the reporting of some accounts, how can it be detected? Is it possible to record an event accurately through the recording of a narrative? Readers and users of oral history works are often faced with these questions, and sometimes encounter doubts about some oral history works.From Revolutionary Circles to the Military Arm of the Islamic Government
In those days, it became clear that certain institutions had to be established very quickly—institutions suited to the temperament, expectations, and lingering aspirations of the younger generation; young people who had been politically active before the Revolution and, in some cases, had been directly entangled in arrests, imprisonment, ...Authenticating Oral History: From Possibility to Necessity
The use of oral history as one of the historical sources has long been one of the principal challenges facing oral historians and those who employ it in contemporary historiography. The development of international standards for oral history, as well as IRIB standards, was intended to address the criticisms raised in this regard. The relationship between Diplomatics in written records and oral history is reciprocal.100 Questions/27
What is the place of research ethics in compiling oral history?We asked several researchers and activists in the field of oral history to express their views on oral history questions. The names of each participant are listed at the beginning of their answers, and the text of all answers will be published on this portal by the end of the week.
