
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Laurie Taylor talks to Louise Ryan, Professor of Sociology at the London Metropolitan University, about her oral history of the Irish nurses who were the backbone of the NHS for many years. By the 1960s approximately 30,000 Irish-born nurses were working across the NHS, constituting around 12% of all nursing staff. From the rigours of training to the fun of dancehalls, she explores their life experiences as nurses and also as Irish migrants, including those times when they encountered anti Irish racism. They’re joined by Bronwen Walter, Emerita Professor of Irish Diaspora Studies at Anglia Ruskin University, who discusses the way that Irish migration offers an unusual opportunity to explore wider questions about the experience of immigrants and how ethnic identities persist or change over time.
Producer: Jayne Egerton
4.5
294294 ratings
Laurie Taylor talks to Louise Ryan, Professor of Sociology at the London Metropolitan University, about her oral history of the Irish nurses who were the backbone of the NHS for many years. By the 1960s approximately 30,000 Irish-born nurses were working across the NHS, constituting around 12% of all nursing staff. From the rigours of training to the fun of dancehalls, she explores their life experiences as nurses and also as Irish migrants, including those times when they encountered anti Irish racism. They’re joined by Bronwen Walter, Emerita Professor of Irish Diaspora Studies at Anglia Ruskin University, who discusses the way that Irish migration offers an unusual opportunity to explore wider questions about the experience of immigrants and how ethnic identities persist or change over time.
Producer: Jayne Egerton
5,412 Listeners
381 Listeners
1,843 Listeners
162 Listeners
7,909 Listeners
296 Listeners
500 Listeners
1,782 Listeners
1,050 Listeners
901 Listeners
1,925 Listeners
1,081 Listeners
602 Listeners
723 Listeners
865 Listeners
248 Listeners
67 Listeners
832 Listeners
80 Listeners
403 Listeners
75 Listeners
4,121 Listeners
2,985 Listeners
32 Listeners