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Courses
Courses
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University Life
University Life
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About University of Galway
About University of Galway
Since 1845, University of Galway has been sharing the highest quality teaching and research with Ireland and the world. Find out what makes our University so special – from our distinguished history to the latest news and campus developments.
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Colleges & Schools
Colleges & Schools
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Research & Innovation
Research & Innovation
University of Galway’s vibrant research community take on some of the most pressing challenges of our times.
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Business & Industry
Guiding Breakthrough Research at University of Galway
We explore and facilitate commercial opportunities for the research community at University of Galway, as well as facilitating industry partnership.
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Alumni & Friends
Alumni & Friends
There are 128,000 University of Galway alumni worldwide. Stay connected to your alumni community! Join our social networks and update your details online.
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Community Engagement
Community Engagement
At University of Galway, we believe that the best learning takes place when you apply what you learn in a real world context. That's why many of our courses include work placements or community projects.
News and Events
Monday, 9 August 2021
Ireland is not unique in its institutional past. It was, however, much later in addressing it and ending it. The Tuam Oral History project is a small piece of the story around this country's historical accountability for its institutional past. Read Full Article (RTE.ie)
Thursday, 11 February 2021
Survivors of the Tuam mother and baby homes have criticised the destruction of testimony evidence by the state’s investigating commission but welcomed the introduction of the Tuam Oral History Project. Read Full Article (The Times)
Sunday, 17 January 2021
The report of the investigation into what happened in Ireland’s mother and baby homes has been met with dismay and distrust by many survivors. Read Full Article (Business Post - subscription required)
Sunday, 17 January 2021
Opening the records goes far beyond this report and shows how survivors were silenced, writes Barry Houlihan. Read Full Article: Irish Independent (subscription required)
Friday, 15 January 2021
The mother and baby home report underlines why we need to grapple with our country’s dark past, writes Elaine Feeney of the Tuam Oral History Project. Read Full Article (The Guardian)
Thursday, 30 July 2020
A new digital exhibition of the Tuam Oral History Project has opened as researchers and survivors pave the way for consultation on a memorial that could be set within the campus of NUI Galway. Read Full Article (Irish Examiner)
Thursday, 30 July 2020
NUI Galway has launched a new podcast series narrated by actor Cillian Murphy that shares the stories of Mother and Baby Home survivors. It comes as part of a new digital exhibition of the Tuam Oral History Project launched today, featuring biographies of some of the survivors of the Tuam Mother and Baby Home. Read Full Article (Western People)
Monday, 9 September 2019
....... Some say the veil still hasn't lifted. Read Full Article (CNN.com)
Tuesday, 11 June 2019
Tuam Mother and Baby Home survivors will tell their stories on a new RTÉ podcast, Morning Ireland Extra. Read Full Article (Irishcentral.com)
Friday, 14 June 2019
In the second edition of Morning Ireland Extra's podcast on Tuam Mother and Baby Home, we meet two survivors with vastly different perspectives on their time in Tuam. Read Full Article (RTE.ie)
Friday, 7 June 2019
Earlier this year survivors of the mother-and-baby home at Tuam, Co Galway, gathered at NUI Galway for the launch of The Tuam Oral History Project. The initiative, separate to the Mother and Baby Homes Commission, is aimed at giving survivors and those associated with the home an opportunity to tell their personal stories. Read Full Article (RTE.ie)
Friday, 8 February 2019
A project aimed at collecting the personal histories of people born at the Tuam mother-and-baby home was launched in Galway on Thursday. Read Full Article (Irish Times)
Thursday, 7 February 2019
The testimonies of people who spent time in the mother-and-baby-home in Tuam are to be recorded and archived as part of a new initiative. Read Full Article (RTE.ie)
Thursday, 7 February 2019
NUI Galway has hosted a public event with members from the Tuam Home Survivors Network and featuring a range of speakers, including historian Catherine Corless, Dr Sarah-Anne Buckley of the Department of History, NUI Galway, and Irish Examiner reporter Conall Ó Fátharta. Read Full Article (Irish Examiner)
Saturday, 2 February 2019
A fresh archive of the oral history of the Tuam Mother and Baby Home will ensure that the stories of injustice from that place are not lost to history. Read Full Article (galwaydaily.com)
Friday, 1 February 2019
The personal histories and experiences of survivors of the Tuam Mother and Baby Home are to be gathered by researchers at NUI Galway. Read Full Article (Irish Examiner)
Tuesday, 12 January 2021
The Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation has produced its final report detailing the experiences of women and children who lived in 14 mother and baby homes and four county homes between 1922 and 1998. Survivors have argued that the report is incomplete. Listen here (The Last Word with Matt Cooper)
Saturday, 8 May 2021
A new NUI Galway production created by Dr Miriam Haughton and students from NUIG’s drama and theatre studies faculty, responds to the lived experiences notably missing from the report into mother and baby homes. Nochtaithe is a moving, maddening, creative work echoing the experiences of the women and girls. Read more (The Irish Times)
Friday, 29 April 2022
Dr Sarah-Anne Buckley, a foremost in the history of childhood in Ireland, argues that our national story remains incomplete until we recognise our institutional history. Calling for a survivor/ person-centred approach, she reflects on the importance of testimony in piecing together an understanding of Ireland's Carceral Institutions. Read more (University of Galway Cois Coiribe Magazine)
Saturday, 17 May 2025
Dr Sarah-Anne Buckley and Elaine Feeney welcome plans to teach the history, legacy and literature of Ireland’s dark past at Junior Cert level. This week The National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NCCA) published three modules addressing the history, legacy and literature of Ireland’s institutions – including the mother and baby institutions, industrial and reformatory schools and Magdalene laundries. Read more (Thejournal.ie)
Tuesday, 20 May 2025
Minister for Education and Youth Helen McEntee has today welcomed the publication by the NCCA of a curriculum resource to support post-primary schools in enabling students to learn about Mother and Baby homes. The resource consists of units of learning for Junior Cycle History, and for Junior Cycle Civic, Social and Political Education (CSPE). Read more (Gov.ie)
Wednesday, 21 May 2025
For the first time, a formal curriculum resource on Ireland’s mother and baby institutions, industrial and reformatory schools and Magdalene laundries has been published by the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment. Joining Seán to discuss this is Sarah Anne Buckley, Associate Professor in History at the University of Galway and one of the leads of the Tuam Oral History Project, whose research has been included in the second level course. Listen here (Newstalk with Sean Moncrieff)
Monday, 14 July 2025
Annette McKay, whose baby sister died in a Tuam mother and baby home, describes her mother's story and why she believes the excavation is "momentous". Dr Sarah-Anne Buckley, Associate Professor of History at University of Galway, discusses the significance of the excavation. Listen here (RTE Radio 1 News at 1)
Monday, 14 July 2025
Experts are searching for the remains of hundreds of children who died at the institution run by Catholic nuns until 1961, including bodies disposed of in a disused sewage system. Read more (New York Times)
Tuesday, 15 July 2025
A team of forensic archaeologists and crime scene experts has begun excavations at the site of a former church-run institution in Ireland, where the remains of approximately 800 children are believed to be buried. See more (CNN Newsroom Instagram)
Saturday, 19 July 2025
Last Monday, excavators began work at St. Mary's Mother-and-Baby Home in Tuam where unmarried pregnant women were sent to give birth from 1925 to 1961. Experts from several countries are working together to search for and identify the remains of hundreds of babies and young children who died there. Listen here (rnz.co.nz)