Goretti Horgan

Goretti Horgan is an Irish socialist activist and a lecturer in social policy at the University of Ulster in Northern Ireland.[1]

Born in Ireland, Horgan was named for Maria Goretti. She attended university before moving to England. She later returned to Dublin, where she became involved in pro-choice campaigning. Before becoming a lecturer, she worked as a Research Fellow at the University and as a researcher for Save the Children and the National Children's Bureau. Before training as a researcher, she worked as a community worker in Derry city and County Londonderry. Before moving to Northern Ireland in 1986, she worked in television production in RTÉ in Dublin. She was Chair of the Northern Ireland Anti Poverty Network (NIAPN) from 2005-2008 and remains a member of the Board of Directors of NIAPN.[2]

Horgan is also a socialist and women’s rights activist, particularly known for her pro-choice campaigning. She was a member of the first Women’s Right to Choose Group in Ireland in the early 1980s and a founder of the Anti Amendment Campaign – the campaign to oppose the Eighth (anti-abortion) amendment to the Irish Constitution. She was later National Organiser of the Anti Amendment Campaign. In Northern Ireland, she was a founder member of the Derry Women’s Right to Choose Group and of Alliance for Choice. She is a campaigner for children’s rights and for the rights of disabled people.[3]

A member of the Socialist Workers Party since the early 1980s, her partner is Eamonn McCann the writer, journalist and fellow socialist. They live in the Bogside in Derry with their daughter, Matty, who is in her 20s. She was the official leader of the Socialist Environmental Alliance until its dissolution in 2008.[4]

Like her partner, she has been on trial, and acquitted of all charges, for anti-war activity. She was one of nine women who occupied the Raytheon facility in Derry in January 2009, during the Israeli assault on Gaza. All were charged with burglary and criminal damage but argued in court they were trying to stop Raytheon's collusion in what they called Israeli war crimes. The jury found them not guilty.[5]

References

  1. Profile: University of Ulster staff, ulster.ac.uk; accessed 3 January 2016.
  2. NIAPN website; accessed 3 January 2016.
  3. Profile, tallgirlshorts.net; accessed 3 January 2016.
  4. Profile, electoralcommission.org.uk; accessed 3 January 2016.
  5. All nine acquitted in Raytheon occupation, derryjournal.com; accessed 3 January 2016.

External links


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