In a media setting, and within the public mind, Ireland’s ‘Third City’ has acquired an
intensely negative reputation over time. While there are many historical precedents for the
maligning of the place’s image, it is generally agreed that the 1980s reached a new low
within media practice with the ascription, in some media quarters, of the label ‘Stab City’ to
Limerick. The blanket representation of Limerick as a place of crime, social disorder, poverty
and social exclusion has continued and it has been amplified in recent years, particularly in
the context of the feuds between rival drugs gangs, most of which have been played out in the
city’s marginalized local authority estates such as Moyross, St. Mary’s Park, Southill and
Ballinacurra Weston. Understandably, a variety of interest groups have expressed concern
over the ways in which Limerick generally and marginalized areas in particular have been
misrepresented by the mass media
History
Publication
Understanding Limerick: Social Exclusion and Change Hourigan, Niamh (ed);