Micheál MacGréil

Fr Micheál P MacGréil S.J. (born 1931), is a Jesuit priest, sociologist, writer and activist from Ireland.

Biography

Micheál MacGréil was born in Clonaslee, County Laois in 1931 and grew up in near Westport, County Mayo.[1] Fr MacGréil was educated by the Christian Brothers in Westport, and served in the Irish Army from 1950 until 1959 as a cadet and officer.[2] MacGreil studied Louvain, Kent State University, Milltown Park and University College Dublin from where he gained his doctorate in sociology in 1976. A lecturer in Sociology the National University at St. Patrick's College, Maynooth from 1971 until he retired in 1996, he also lectured for a time in UCD.

An activist on many issues such as Prison Reform, Irish Language, and more recently the Western Rail Corridor.[3] He retired as lecturer in NUIM and was appointed to a parish in Westport, County Mayo. In 1980, Dr MacGréil revived the tradition of making a pilgrimage to Máméan.[4] In 1981, he chaired a special working party on the Jesuit Catholic Workers College, which was to evolve into the National College of Ireland. Fr MacGréil has published many books, papers and reports on social issues and attitudes in Ireland.

In 1994 Dr MacGréil served as president of AONTAS, the Irish national adult learning organisation.

Publications

  • A psycho-socio-cultural theory of prejudice: As tested in data collected from selected samples in the Philadelphia and Cleveland metropolitan areas (1966)
  • Community In The Making (1970)
  • Prejudice And Tolerance In Ireland (1978) - won the Christopher Ewart-Biggs Memorial Prize
  • The Sligo-Limerick Railway: a Case for Its Restoration (1981)
  • Memoirs, 1911-86 James Horan (1992)
  • Prejudice in Ireland Revisited with the Survey and Research Unit, St. Patrick's College, Maynooth (1996)
  • Quo Vadimus. Ca Bhfuil Ar dTriall?/Where are We going? (1998)
  • Report on Religious Attitudes in Ireland (2007-2008)
  • The Emancipation of The Travelling People (2010)[5]
  • Pluralism and Diversity in Ireland: Prejudice and Related Issues in Early 21st Century Ireland (2012)
gollark: You could always buy a non-smartphone.
gollark: No?
gollark: If it's running on a remotely modern CPU it's probably using the CPU's virtualization extensions, which leaves you vulnerable to some exploits.
gollark: Just don't expect it to be entirely secure.
gollark: Yes, which means it can't be *easily* defeated, and likely can't be by a random program I guess.

References

  1. The ongoing present a critical look at the society and world in which I grew up by Micheal Mac Greil, Messenger Publications.
  2. Michael Mac Greil Veritas Books Online.
  3. Rail Network: Presentation Oireachtas Joint Committee on transport, Wednesday 12 November 2003.
  4. Mayo match impacts on Oilithreacht go Máméan By Sarah Mac Donald, Catholic Ireland, 07 August, 2013
  5. Fr Micheal MacGreil publishes new report on Traveller emancipation Archived 23 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine by Sean Ryan, CatholicIreland.net, 14 June 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.