She is a first-class B.A. (Hons) graduate of Humanities from Carlow College, and a first-class honours M.Phil. in History graduate from Trinity College Dublin. She completed her Ph.D. study in Trinity College Dublin under the supervision of Professor David Fitzpatrick. She is the author of Electioneering and Propaganda in Ireland 1917-21: Votes, Violence and Victory (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2020) and co-editor of Vying for Victory, The 1923 General Election in the Irish Free State (Dublin: UCD Press, 2023).
Callinan, E. (2020). Electioneering and propaganda in Ireland: Votes, violence and victory 1917–1921. Dublin.
Callinan, E., Farrell, M., & Tormey, T. (2023). Vying for victory: The 1923 general election in the Irish Free State. UCD Press.
Callinan, E. (2018). The mood of the nation: Ireland’s response to Redmond’s call to war in 1914 as reported in the regional press. En The Irish regional press, 1892–2012: Changing media in a changing country (pp. xx–xx). Dublin.
Callinan, E. (2020). Voting to maintain the Union in 1918: ‘The strongest pillars upon which they stood’. En C. Morrissey & B. Hughes (Eds.), Southern Irish loyalism 1912–1949 (pp. xx–xx). Liverpool University Press.
Callinan, E. (2025). ‘There can be no compromise’: The propaganda of the Irish Civil War. En Y. Kokosalakis & F. J. Leira-Castiñeira (Eds.), Violence and propaganda in European civil wars: Dimensions of conflict, 1917–1949. Routledge.
Callinan, E. (2020). Review of Irish women and the Great War, by F. Walsh. Saothar.
Callinan, E. (2021). Review of Margaret Skinnider, Life and Times Series, Historical Association of Ireland, by M. McAuliffe. Women’s History Association of Ireland.
Callinan, E. (2022). Review of Margaret Skinnider, by M. McAuliffe. Women’s History Association of Ireland.
Callinan, E. (2024). Review of Cathal Brugha, An Indomitable Spirit, and Ireland and the Great War. Irish Literary Supplement.
Callinan, E. (2025). Review of Conscription, US Intervention and the Transformation of Ireland 1914–1918, by E. Destenay. Journal of Modern History.
Callinan, E. (2014, May). Redmond’s gamble. Irish Times Supplement: Countdown to War.
Callinan, E. (2019). Carlow and the 1918 general election. Carloviana: Journal of the Carlow Historical and Archaeological Society.
Callinan, E. (2020). Carlow and the War of Independence. Carloviana: Journal of the Carlow Historical and Archaeological Society.
Callinan, E. (2021, April). The 1921 “partition” election. Trinity College Dublin Contemporary Irish History Seminar.
Callinan, E. (2021, April). Talking History. Newstalk.
Callinan, E. (2021, March). Propaganda and women in elections from 1918 to 1920. Women’s History of Ireland Conference, Decade of Centenaries funded panel.
Callinan, E. (2021, January). Bookline Show [Entrevista de Teresa Quinn]. Liffeysound 96.4FM, NEARfm, Phoenixfm Athlone, Castlebar, Connemara, Kinvara, Youghal y Kilkenny City.
Callinan, E. (2021, January). Entrevista. Carlow Nationalist.
Callinan, E. (2020, December). Entrevista con Myles Dungan. The History Show, RTE.
Callinan, E. (2020, April). Aftermath of recent Irish elections. KCLR Radio, Morning Show.
Callinan, E. (2024). History of the Fine Gael Party. Newstalk’s Talking History.
Callinan, E. (2024). Participación. Newstalk Breakfast.
Callinan, E. (2024). Returning to College as a Mature Student. KCLR, Top Tips Tuesday.
Callinan, E. (2019). Partition propaganda during election campaigns 1918–1921. Irish Humanities Alliance Border Heritages Conference.
Callinan, E. (2019). Money is coming in with dreadful slowness: The economics of electioneering to win votes in 1918 Ireland. Economic & Social History Society of Ireland Conference.
Callinan, E. (2021). The best feminist propaganda that is being done is being done by the mere fact of voting…: Propaganda and women in elections from 1918 to 1920. Women’s History Association of Ireland.
Callinan, E. (s.f.). Labour and the 1918 general election. Irish Congress of Trade Unions & Irish Centre for the Histories of Labour and Class (NUIG).
Callinan, E. (s.f.). The Struggle for Independence – Ireland and Westmeath in 1919: The First Dáil and constitutional politics in Westmeath. Westmeath Archaeological and Historical Society, Fourth Annual Conference.