The Scottish Question
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:12th Jun '14
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Over half a century ago, a leading commentator suggested that Scotland was very unusual in being a country which was, in some sense at least, a nation but in no sense a state. He asked whether something 'so anomalous' could continue to exist in the modern world. The Scottish Question considers how Scotland has retained its sense of self, and how the country has changed against a backdrop of fundamental changes in society, economy, and the role of the state over the course of the union. The Scottish Question has been a shifting mix of linked issues and concerns including national identity; Scotland's constitutional status and structures of government; Scotland's distinctive party politics; and everyday public policy. In this volume, James Mitchell explores how these issues have interacted against a backdrop of these changes. He concludes that while the independence referendum may prove an important event, there can be no definitive answer to the Scottish Question. The Scottish Question offers a fresh interpretation of what has made Scotland distinctive and how this changed over time, drawing on an array of primary and secondary sources. It challenges a number of myths, including how radical Scottish politics has been, and suggests that an oppositional political culture was one of the most distinguishing features of Scottish politics in the twentieth century. A Scottish lobby, consisting of public and private bodies, became adept in making the case for more resources from the Treasury without facing up to some of Scotland's most deep-rooted problems.
James Mitchell, a long-standing scholar of Scotlands politics, provides the reader with a panoramic view on the process of home rule in the Caledonian country throughout contemporary times. * Scottish Affairs *
Mitchell's account contains plenty of fascinating detail ... and plenty of wonderful ironies, given the shifting sands of the politics of devolution * Bob Harris, English Historical Review *
argues that the Scots can be a nation without a state * Andy McSmith, Books of the year 2014, The Independent *
ISBN: 9780199688654
Dimensions: 239mm x 162mm x 26mm
Weight: 626g
320 pages