Twenty-seven years after the Good Friday Agreement, Northern Ireland's constitutional position remains contested, its institutions fragile, and its economic trajectory uncertain.
The Economic Dimension
The Windsor Framework has created an economic reality that its architects euphemistically describe as "unique opportunities." Northern Ireland trades freely with both the EU single market and the UK internal market, a position that is genuinely advantageous for some sectors and genuinely disruptive for others.
Inward investment figures are encouraging. Several large manufacturers have chosen Northern Ireland precisely because of its dual-market access. But small retailers, particularly those dependent on GB supply chains, continue to face practical difficulties.
The Political Temperature
The recent elections produced a result without modern precedent: Sinn Féin as the largest party, the DUP in second place, and the Alliance Party — formally neutral on the constitutional question — in third and growing.
The arithmetic of power-sharing means that any functioning Executive requires cross-community cooperation. Whether the parties currently in Stormont can sustain that cooperation through the next difficult period is the central political question facing the province.