The Belfast Project was an oral history project on the Troubles based at Boston College in Massachusetts, U.S. The project began in 2000[1] and the last interviews were concluded in 2006.[2] The interviews were intended to be released after the participants' deaths[1] and serve as a resource for future historians.
Ed Moloney was the project's director.[3] Anthony McIntyre conducted interviews with Irish republicans (including Brendan Hughes, Dolours Price, Ivor Bell, and Richard O'Rawe[4]), while Wilson McArthur interviewed loyalists.[5] The two interviewed more than 40 people.[2][1]
Interviews with Hughes and David Ervine[6] were used (after their deaths) as the basis for Moloney's 2010 book Voices From The Grave: Two Men's War in Ireland, drawing attention to the archive.[7][1][8] Subsequently, interviews dealing with the murder of Jean McConville were subpoenaed by the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI).[9] Moloney and McIntyre filed a lawsuit seeking to block this request, arguing that it placed project participants at risk.[9] The ACLU filed a supporting brief.[9] However, the PSNI ultimately won the resulting court battle, with a United States appeals court decision stating, "The choice to investigate criminal activity belongs to the government and is not subject to veto by academic researchers."[9]
In 2014, these interviews were used to charge Ivor Bell with soliciting McConville's murder.[10] Bell was acquitted—the court found the tapes to be unreliable and they were not admitted as evidence.[10] These tapes are also thought to have contributed to Gerry Adams's 2014 arrest, in which no charges were ultimately filed.[1]
The project's interviews with the loyalist Winston Churchill Rea were later subpoenaed by the PSNI and used to prosecute him for murder and other crimes in 2016.[11] Rea's trial was delayed repeatedly due to his failing health and the coronavirus pandemic.[12] He died in 2023, before the trial could be concluded.[12]