Irish Famine Migration and Laissez-Faire Theodicy, 1846–1853
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 December 2024
There was an ideological framework to the ostensibly ‘spontaneous’ Famine migration of the late 1840s and early 1850s, when over two million Irish people fled the island. It exemplified the mid Victorian imperial state’s commitment to taking advantage of the Famine to convert the Irish countryside from a subsistence economy of peasants and potatoes to an export economy of large-scale graziers. In the case of the Irish Potato Famine, laissez-faire implicated the British government in mass death.
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