30 January 2024, Belfast
The inaugural Dr Éamon Phoenix Memorial Lecture has been delivered at Stranmillis University College by Joseph P Kennedy III.
Mr Kennedy, the United States Department of State Special Envoy to Northern Ireland for Economic Affairs, was keynote speaker for the event, in the college’s conference hall.
At the event, Dr Phoenix’s wife, Alice, announced the creation of the Éamon Phoenix Foundation, established to honour and promote the legacy of Éamon’s work as a historian committed to positive community relations and a shared understanding of our past.
The College created the annual memorial lecture to honour the legacy of its former colleague – one of the pre-eminent public historians of our time, with a unique ability to bring history to life.
Speaking to a packed audience, Principal and CEO of Stranmillis, Professor Jonathan Heggarty, said: “It is a mark of Dr Éamon Phoenix’s reputation and respect that we are thrilled to welcome the US Special Envoy as our Keynote speaker for this inaugural event.
“Education has, and continues to be, a passion for Joe Kennedy III, not just in words, but in positive action through driving policy reform and plans for education that addresses each step along a child’s path; through promoting early childhood learning that prevents the achievement gap; continually advocating for universal proficiency and dynamic innovation in the classroom; and ensuring higher education is accessible to all.
“Themes and actions that would resonate strongly with Dr Éamon Phoenix.”
In his keynote speech, “Education as a Catalyst for Economic Progress”, the Envoy spoke passionately about educational disadvantage, early years education, the need for educational innovation and education as the foundation and cornerstone of economic prosperity:
“No one doubts the role of education as the catalyst of economic progress. It’s self-evident in a world growing increasingly interdependent through technology and increasingly reliant on the products of research labs and institutes to develop heat-resistant crops, more efficient appliances, smarter grids and genome-altering medical advances…It all begins with education.
“Northern Ireland has one of the most highly educated work-forces in the world. The talent here has drawn investments from over 230 U.S. firms who now employ over 30,000 workers.
“Northern Ireland is the number one destination for cyber-security investments in Europe. Innovations in AI, genome-sequencing, film industry CGI and aerospace are reaching everywhere from the River Foyle in Derry to the docksides of Belfast.
“ I would be remiss not to mention when learning begins: at birth. Research shows us repeatedly the dramatic impact of early childhood education not only on education attainment, but on economic opportunity, as well.
“Access to early education sets children up to be ready for primary school, improves early literacy, and is critical to a child’s social-emotional development. It directly contributes to a higher likelihood of completing secondary school and advancing to higher education.
“The early years are when we learn how to work with others, make critical decisions, and relate to each other: all skills needed not only in the classroom, but in the workplace as well. It also builds stronger communities.
“Access to early education not only sets children up to thrive, but it also provides families with greater financial security. When children are in care, parents can work; student parents can achieve degrees. Early education is perhaps the best investment in education – and economic opportunity for families – that we can make. And it is where Northern Ireland has a chance to stand apart.
“You want to keep that young talent from going to London or Boston? Provide those young parents access to affordable childcare. You want to get more caregivers back into the workforce? Provide more access to affordable childcare. You want to build the earning capacity of young couples? Provide more access to affordable childcare. You want to increase opportunities for integrated education? Provide more access to affordable childcare. You want to increase the prospects of peace and prosperity? Provide more access for affordable childcare.
“Why? Because kids are kids. In all of my travels to almost every corner of our world, I have yet to find a child where if you don’t throw a ball to them they won’t throw it back. Kids laugh and play. They don’t know how to hurt or hate. Their wants and needs are the simple, basic things that unite us all.
“That is, of course, the great lesson that Northern Ireland teaches the world. A lesson that Dr Phoenix knew well, and that has certainly taken hold of me. That despite our differences and divides, our future is shared.
“Our prosperity is linked. That there is, in fact, only one path forward — together. It’s a lesson demonstrated again last evening, and one, I’m certain, that would have Dr Phoenix cheering.”
The inaugural lecture was also addressed by Dr Jayne Brady MBE, Head of the Northern Ireland Civil Service, who paid a heartfelt tribute to the work and impact Éamon Phoenix made to so many on the island.
An insightful history of education lecture was given by Prof Noel Purdy (Stranmillis) and Dr Tom Walsh (Maynooth University). Entitled “Partition and Educational Policy Divergence in the 1920s” the lecture presented an analysis of the impact of partition on educational policy and practice in the Irish Free State and Northern Ireland, focusing on the political and educational context, and the contribution of key figures including Professor Eoin MacNeill and Rev Professor Timothy Corcoran in the south, and Lord Londonderry and Sir Robert Lynn in the north.
The lecture also provided some examples of “cautious convergence” in north-south educational policy a century after partition.
The evening concluded with closing remarks from Éamon’s wife Alice, including the announcement on the creation of the Dr Éamon Phoenix Foundation.