Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T08:44:47.907Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Select Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 June 2020

Ben Jackson
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
Get access
Type
Chapter
Information
The Case for Scottish Independence
A History of Nationalist Political Thought in Modern Scotland
, pp. 180 - 205
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Primary Sources

Secondary Sources

Anderson, Perry, ‘Origins of the Present Crisis’, New Left Review, no. 23, 1964, pp. 26–53Google Scholar
Anderson, Perry, ‘Critique of Wilsonism’, New Left Review, no. 27, 1964, pp. 3–27Google Scholar
Anderson, Perry, English Questions (London, Verso, 1992)Google Scholar
Anon., ‘The Irish Menace’, Scots Independent, no. 2, December 1926Google Scholar
Anon., ‘Scotland’s Answer to the Crisis: Manifesto by the National Party’, Scots Independent, no. 255, November 1947Google Scholar
Anon., ‘Policy Resolutions by National Party Conference’, Scots Independent, no. 280, December 1949Google Scholar
Anon., ‘Scotland – Free or Fettered?’, Scots Independent, no. 305, January 1952Google Scholar
Anon., ‘Court Decision Warning to All Those Who Would Be Free’, Scots Independent, no. 322, June 1953Google Scholar
Anon., ‘The National Party in Conference’, Scots Independent, no. 321, May 1953Google Scholar
Anon., ‘Scotland’s Dilemma Posed Again by Judicial Opinion’, Scots Independent, no. 325, September 1953Google Scholar
Anon., ‘Survey: The ’79 Group: Where Are They Now?’, Radical Scotland, no. 5, June/July 1983, pp. 7–9Google Scholar
Archer, Clive and Maxwell, Stephen (eds.), The Nordic Model: Studies in Public Policy Innovation (Farnborough, Gower, 1980)Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘The Day the SNP Became a “Normal” Political Party’, Scotsman, 2 June 1975Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘Sillars Decides to Go It Alone’, Scotsman, 10 June 1975Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘Assembly “Stage to Freedom”’, Scotsman, 22 October 1976Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘Nationalists Want Economic Prefects’, Scotsman, 5 March 1976Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘The Salad Days Are Over for the SNP’, Scotsman, 27 May 1976Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘Sillars Puts New Party on Course’, Scotsman, 19 January 1976Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘The World of Woad!’, Forward Scotland: Journal of the Scottish Labour Party, no. 1, July 1976Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘Divine Right of Parliaments’, Scotsman, 18 February 1977Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘Future Imperfect’, New Edinburgh Review, no. 44, winter 1978, pp. 25–8Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘Party in Search of a Strategy’, Scotsman, 7 June 1978Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘SNP Road to Success’, Scotsman, 21 November 1978Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘Back from the Depths on Black Friday’, Scotsman, 3 March 1979Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘MacDiarmid and Politics’, in Scott, Paul and Davis, A. C. (eds.), The Age of MacDiarmid (Edinburgh, Mainstream, 1980), pp. 224–37Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘Ancient Britons and the Republican Dream’, John Mackintosh Memorial Lecture, Edinburgh University, 16 November 1985, Radical Scotland, no. 18, December/January 1986; reprinted in Neal Ascherson, Games with Shadows (London, Radius, 1988), pp. 146–58Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘Devolution Diary’, Cencrastus, no. 22, winter 1986, pp. 3–12, 49–54Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘Local Government and the Myth of Sovereignty’, Fifth Sovereignty lecture, 25 February 1994, Royal Museum of Scotland (London, Charter 88 Trust, 1994)Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘The “Glorious” Anglo-Scottish Union Belongs to a Past Era’, Financial Times, 15 July 2014Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, ‘Why I’m Voting Yes’, Prospect, 17 July 2014Google Scholar
Barnett, Anthony, This Time: Our Constitutional Revolution (London, Vintage, 1997)Google Scholar
Barrow, Geoffrey, Robert the Bruce and the Community of the Realm of Scotland (London, Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1965)Google Scholar
Bell, Alex, ‘Existential versus Utilitarian Nationalism’, Bella Caledonia, 6 May 2015, at https://bellacaledonia.org.uk/2015/05/06/existential-versus-utilitarian-nationalismGoogle Scholar
Beveridge, Craig and Turnbull, Ronald, ‘The Myth of Scottish Inarticulacy’, Bulletin of Scottish Politics, no. 2, spring 1981, pp. 134–8Google Scholar
Beveridge, Craig and Turnbull, Ronald, ‘Inferiorism’, Cencrastus, no. 8, spring 1982, pp. 4–5Google Scholar
Beveridge, Craig and Turnbull, Ronald, The Eclipse of Scottish Culture (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1989)Google Scholar
Beveridge, Craig and Turnbull, Ronald, Scotland after Enlightenment: Image and Tradition in Modern Scottish Culture (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1997)Google Scholar
Boyd, Cat and Morrison, Jenny, Scottish Independence: A Feminist Response (Edinburgh, Word Power Books, 2014)Google Scholar
Brown, Gordon, ‘Introduction: The Socialist Challenge’, in Brown, Gordon (ed.), The Red Paper on Scotland (Edinburgh, EUSPB, 1975), pp. 721Google Scholar
Brown, Gordon (ed.), The Red Paper on Scotland (Edinburgh, EUSPB, 1975)Google Scholar
Brown, Gordon, ‘Labour – Where the Strength Lies’, Question, no. 4, January 1976Google Scholar
Brown, Oliver, Scotland: The Satellite! (Glasgow, Scottish Secretariat, 1958)Google Scholar
Brown, Oliver, The Anglo-Scottish Union of 1707: Then and Now (Stirling, Scots Independent, n.d. [c. 1959])Google Scholar
Buchanan, George, The Art and Science of Government among the Scots, edited by MacNeill, Duncan H. (Glasgow, MacLellan, 1964)Google Scholar
Burnett, Ray, ‘Scotland and Antonio Gramsci’, Scottish International, vol. 5, no. 9, November 1972, pp. 1215Google Scholar
Burnett, Ray, ‘Socialists and the SNP’, in Brown, Gordon (ed.), The Red Paper on Scotland (Edinburgh, EUSPB, 1975), pp. 108–24Google Scholar
Burnett, Ray, ‘When the Finger Points at the Moon’, in Young, James D. (ed.), Scotland at the Crossroads: A Socialist Answer (Glasgow, Clydeside Press, 1990), pp. 90110Google Scholar
Burnett, Ray, ‘Gramsci and Scotland Revisited’, Scottish Left Review, no. 99 (2017), pp. 25–6Google Scholar
Burnett, Ray and McCann, Eamon, ‘Derry: Fighting under the Flag of the Citizens’ Army: An Interview with Eamon McCann and Ray Burnett on the Barricades’, Socialist Worker, 21 August 1969Google Scholar
Campaign for a Scottish Assembly, A Claim of Right for Scotland, July 1988, reprinted in Owen Dudley Edwards (ed.), A Claim of Right for Scotland (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1989), pp. 9–53Google Scholar
Chiene, Peter, ‘Problems for the SLP’, Question, no. 14, 22 October 1976Google Scholar
Chiene, Peter, ‘Slimming Session at Stirling’, Question, no. 15, 5 November 1976Google Scholar
Clark, Angus, ‘Scotland a Nation’, Scots Independent, no. 1, November 1926Google Scholar
Clarty, Tony, ‘Scottish Legal Culture and the Withering Away of the State: A Study in MacCormick’s Nationalism’, Cencrastus, no. 14, autumn 1983, pp. 5–9Google Scholar
Clarty, Tony, ‘Independence and the Scottish Political Imagination’, Cencrastus, no. 11, New Year 1983, pp. 26–8Google Scholar
Clarty, Tony and Smith, Alexander McCall (eds.), Power and Manoeuvrability: The International Implications of an Independent Scotland (Edinburgh, Q Press, 1978)Google Scholar
Collie, Liz, ‘A Woman’s Claim of Right for Scotland’, Radical Scotland, no. 39, June/July 1989, pp. 12–13Google Scholar
Cooper, T. M. [Lord Cooper of Culross], ‘The Declaration of Arbroath Revisited’ [1949], in his Selected Papers 1922–54 (Edinburgh and London, Oliver and Boyd, 1957), pp. 324–32Google Scholar
Cunningham, Roseanna, ‘The SNP ’79 Group’, Crann-Tàra, no. 8, autumn 1979Google Scholar
Currie, Andrew, ‘The SNP and Participation’, Question, no. 7, April 1976Google Scholar
Currie, Andrew, ‘Independence’, in SNP ’79 Group Papers No. 1, papers discussed at founding meeting, 31 May 1979, Belford Hotel, Edinburgh (no publisher/date), pp. 8–9Google Scholar
Davidson, Neil, ‘Yes: A Non-Nationalist Argument for Independence’, Radical Philosophy, no. 185, May/June 2014, pp. 2–7Google Scholar
Davie, George, ‘Hume and the Origins of the Common Sense School’, Revue Internationale de Philosophie, 6 (1952), pp. 213–21Google Scholar
Davie, George, ‘Common Sense and Sense-Data’, Philosophical Quarterly, 4 (1954), pp. 229–46CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davie, George, The Democratic Intellect (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2013 [1961])Google Scholar
Davie, George, ‘Anglophobe and Anglophil’, Scottish Journal of Political Economy, 14 (1967), pp. 291302Google Scholar
Davie, George, ‘Discussion’, in Wolfe, J. N. (ed.), Government and Nationalism in Scotland: An Enquiry by Members of the University of Edinburgh (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 1969), pp. 204–5; reprinted as ‘Nationalism and the Philosophy of the Unthinkable’, Edinburgh Review, no. 83, 1990, pp. 38–9Google Scholar
Davie, George, ‘The Social Significance of the Scottish Philosophy of Common Sense’ [1972], in Davie, George, The Scottish Enlightenment and Other Essays (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1991), pp. 5285Google Scholar
Davie, George, The Crisis of the Democratic Intellect (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1986)Google Scholar
Davie, George, ‘The Threat to Scottish Education’, Edinburgh Review, no. 83, 1990, pp. 35–7Google Scholar
Davie, George, ‘The Importance of the Ordinary MA’, Edinburgh Review, no. 90, 1993, pp. 61–9Google Scholar
Davie, George, The Scotch Metaphysics: A Century of Enlightenment in Scotland (London, Routledge, 2001)Google Scholar
Davies, Ron, Devolution: A Process Not an Event (Cardiff, Institute of Welsh Affairs, 1999)Google Scholar
Dewar Gibb, Andrew, Scotland in Eclipse (London, H. Toulmin, 1930)Google Scholar
Dewar Gibb, Andrew, The Shadow on Parliament House: Has Scots Law a Future? (Edinburgh, Porpoise Press, 1932)Google Scholar
Dudley Edwards, Owen, ‘Socialism or Nationalism?’, in Kennedy, Gavin (ed.), The Radical Approach: Papers on an Independent Scotland (Edinburgh, Palingenesis Press, 1976), pp. 98109Google Scholar
Dudley Edwards, Owen (ed.), A Claim of Right for Scotland (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1989)Google Scholar
Duncan, A. A., The Nation of Scots and the Declaration of Arbroath (1320) (London, Historical Association, 1970)Google Scholar
Dunion, Kevin, ‘The Philosopher’s Stone’, Radical Scotland, no. 21, June/July 1986, pp. 31–2Google Scholar
Elliot, Walter, ‘The Scottish Heritage in Politics’, in the Duke of Atholl (ed.), A Scotsman’s Heritage (London, A. Maclehose, 1932), pp. 5365Google Scholar
Erskine of Marr, Hon. Ruaraidh, Changing Scotland (Montrose, Review Press, 1931)Google Scholar
Evans, Gwynfor, Lewis, Roy, Jones, J. E., Donaldson, Arthur, Rollo, David, McIntyre, Robert, Banks, John, Stuckey, Douglas and Bannister, Don, Our Three Nations: Wales, Scotland, England (Cardiff, Plaid Cymru/SNP/Common Wealth Party, 1956)Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, Garret, ‘Anglo-Irish Relations after 1921’, Scots Independent, no. 221, August 1989Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, Garret, ‘Better Relationships in Europe Than at Home’, Scots Independent, no. 223, October 1989Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, Garret, ‘Evolving Relationships After 1973’, Scots Independent, no. 222, September 1989CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fitzgerald, Garret, ‘The British and Irish in the Context of Europe’, John Mackintosh Memorial Lecture, October 1990, Edinburgh University, in Crick, Bernard (ed.), National Identities (Oxford, Blackwell/Political Quarterly, 1990), pp. 724Google Scholar
Foley, James and Ramand, Pete, Yes: The Radical Case for Independence (London, Pluto, 2014)Google Scholar
Gall, Gregor (ed.), Scotland’s Road to Socialism: Time to Choose (Glasgow, Scottish Left Press, 2013)Google Scholar
Gallagher, Tom (ed.), Nationalism in the Nineties (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1991)Google Scholar
Galloway, John, ‘Employment in Scotland’, Scots Independent, no. 260, April 1948Google Scholar
Gellner, Ernest, ‘Nationalism’, in Gellner, Ernest, Thought and Change (London, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1964), pp. 147–78Google Scholar
Gellner, Ernest, ‘Nationalism, or the New Confessions of a Justified Edinburgh Sinner’, Political Quarterly, 49 (1978), pp. 103–11Google Scholar
Gellner, Ernest, Nations and Nationalism (Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 1983)Google Scholar
Gibson, Tom, ‘The Land: The Problem Stated’, Scots Independent, no. 2, December 1926Google Scholar
Gibson, Tom, ‘The Reasons for a National Party’, Scots Independent, no. 13, November 1927Google Scholar
Grassic Gibbon, Lewis and MacDiarmid, Hugh, Scottish Scene or the Intelligent Man’s Guide to Albyn (London, Jarrolds, 1934)Google Scholar
Gray, Alasdair, Independence: An Argument for Home Rule (Edinburgh, Canongate, 2014)Google Scholar
Grieve, C. M., ‘Wider Aspects of Scottish Nationalism’, Scots Independent, no. 13, November 1927Google Scholar
Grieve, C. M., ‘Neo-Gaelic Economics’, Scots Independent, no. 14, December 1927Google Scholar
Grieve, C. M., ‘Neo-Gaelic Economics II’, Scots Independent, no. 16, February 1928Google Scholar
Gunn, Richard, ‘George Davie: Common Sense, Hegelianism and Critique’, Cencrastus, no. 27, autumn 1987, pp. 48–51Google Scholar
Gunn, Richard, ‘Marxism and Common Sense’, Common Sense, no. 11, winter 1991, pp. 79–100Google Scholar
Gunn, Richard, ‘Scottish Common Sense Philosophy’, Edinburgh Review, no. 87, winter 1991, pp. 117–40Google Scholar
Gunn, Richard, ‘Review of Davie, The Scottish Enlightenment and Other Essays’, Common Sense, no. 12, summer 1992, pp. 101–5Google Scholar
Gunn, Richard, ‘Common Sense: A Presentation’, paper for a talk at the Ragged University, Edinburgh, June 2013, pp. 4–5, at www.thiswasnottheplan.com/wp- content/uploads/2016/05/9_common_sense_a_presentation.pdfGoogle Scholar
Gunn, Richard, ‘Common Sense, Scottish Thought and Current Politics’, Bella Caledonia, 26 July 2014, at https://bellacaledonia.org.uk/2014/07/26/common-sense-scottish-thought-and-current-politicsGoogle Scholar
Hargrave, Andrew, ‘Scotland 1980: A Critique’, Question, no. 32, 8 July 1977Google Scholar
Hauser, Richard and Menuhin, Hephzibah, The Fraternal Society (London, Bodley Head, 1962)Google Scholar
Hayek, F. A., The Road to Serfdom (London, Routledge, 1944)Google Scholar
Hechter, Michael, Internal Colonialism: The Celtic Fringe in British National Development (New Brunswick, Transaction Publishers, 1999 [1975])Google Scholar
Hechter, Michael, ‘Internal Colonialism Revisited’, Cencrastus, no. 10, autumn 1982, pp. 8–11Google Scholar
Hepburn, Ian, ‘I’ll Say That Again’, Radical Scotland, no. 1, February/March 1983, pp. 21–2Google Scholar
Hobsbawm, Eric, ‘Some Reflections on The Break-Up of Britain’, New Left Review, no. 105, 1977, pp. 8–23Google Scholar
Hroch, Miroslav, Die Vorkämpfer der nationalen Bewegung bei den kleinen Völkern Europas (Prague, Universita Karlova, 1968); revised and translated as Social Preconditions of National Revival in Europe (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1985)Google Scholar
James, Henry, ‘Ivan Turgenev’, in his Literary Criticism: French Writers, Other European Writers (New York, Library of America, 1984), pp. 9681034Google Scholar
Kennedy, Gavin, ‘Scotland’s Economy’, in Kennedy, Gavin (ed.), The Radical Approach: Papers on an Independent Scotland (Edinburgh, Palingenesis Press, 1976), pp. 4759Google Scholar
Kennedy, Gavin (ed.), The Radical Approach: Papers on an Independent Scotland (Edinburgh, Palingenesis Press, 1976)Google Scholar
Kerevan, George, ‘Arguments within Scottish Marxism’, Bulletin of Scottish Politics, no. 2, spring 1981, pp. 111–33Google Scholar
Kerevan, George, ‘Labourism Revisited’, Chapman, 35/36, July 1983, pp. 2531Google Scholar
Kerevan, George, ‘The Impending Crisis of the Scottish Left and How to Combat It’, Radical Scotland, no. 24, December 1986/January 1987, pp. 7–9Google Scholar
Kerevan, George, ‘Back to the Drawing Board for Nationalists’, Scotsman, 10 May 1999Google Scholar
Kerevan, George, ‘Remember, There Is No Such Thing as Inevitability in Politics’, Scotsman, 20 September 1999Google Scholar
Kerevan, George, ‘Tax System That Can Unite Scotland’, Scotsman, 16 August 1999Google Scholar
Kerevan, George, ‘The Utopian Guff of Tommy Sheridan’, Scotsman, 17 November 2000Google Scholar
Kerevan, George, ‘The Way Forward for SNP Success’, Scotsman, 17 January 2000Google Scholar
Kerevan, George, ‘This Way Forward for the SNP, Mr Swinney’, Scotsman, 22 September 2000Google Scholar
Kerevan, George, ‘SNP on Thin Ice Until It Finds a Real Vision’, Scotsman, 19 April 2004Google Scholar
Kerevan, George, ‘Scotland in the Wider World: Does Size and Sovereignty Matter?’, in Hassan, Gerry and Mitchell, James (eds.), After Independence (Edinburgh, Luath, 2013), pp. 151–61Google Scholar
Kerevan, George, ‘The Case for Yes’, in Kerevan, George and Cochrane, Alan, Scottish Independence: Yes or No (Stroud, The History Press, 2014), pp. 795Google Scholar
Lamont, Archie, Scotland and the War (Glasgow, Scottish Secretariat, 1943)Google Scholar
Lamont, Archie, Small Nations (Glasgow, William MacLellan, 1944)Google Scholar
Lindsay, Isobel, ‘Nationalism, Community and Democracy’, in Kennedy, Gavin (ed.), The Radical Approach: Papers on an Independent Scotland (Edinburgh, Palingenesis Press, 1976), pp. 21–6Google Scholar
Lindsay, Isobel, ‘Divergent Trends’, Radical Scotland, no. 29, October/November 1987, pp. 14–15Google Scholar
Lindsay, Isobel, ‘The SNP and the Lure of Europe’, in Gallagher, Tom (ed.), Nationalism in the Nineties (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1991), pp. 84101Google Scholar
Livingstone, Alison, ‘SLP Reconvened Conference Report’, Scottish Worker, vol. 4, no. 2, February 1977Google Scholar
McAlpine, Robin, ‘The Butterfly Rebellion’, Bella Caledonia, 14 September 2014, at https://bellacaledonia.org.uk/2014/09/14/the-butterfly-rebellionGoogle Scholar
MacAskill, Kenny, Building a Nation: Post-Devolution Nationalism in Scotland (Edinburgh, Luath Press, 2004)Google Scholar
MacCormick, John, The Flag in the Wind (London, Gollancz, 1955)Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, ‘Independence and Constitutional Change’ in MacCormick, Neil (ed.), The Scottish Debate (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1970), pp. 5264Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, ‘Westminster Must Beware of Pushing the SNP into an All-Out Battle’, The Times, 17 May 1977Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, ‘Does the United Kingdom have a Constitution? Reflections on MacCormick v Lord Advocate’, Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly, 29 (1978), pp. 120Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, ‘Constitution’, in MacLean, Colin (ed.), The Crown and the Thistle: The Nature of Nationhood (Edinburgh, Scottish Academic Press, 1979), pp. 149–55Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, ‘Nation and Nationalism’, in MacLean, Colin (ed.), The Crown and the Thistle: The Nature of Nationhood (Edinburgh, Scottish Academic Press, 1979), pp. 99111Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, Legal Right and Social Democracy (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1982)Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, ‘The Idea of Liberty: Some Reflections on Lorimer’s Institutes’, in Hope, Vincent (ed.), Philosophers of the Scottish Enlightenment (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 1984), pp. 233–48Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, ‘Unrepentant Gradualism’, in Edwards, Owen Dudley (ed.), A Claim of Right for Scotland (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1989), pp. 99109Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, ‘An Idea for a Scottish Constitution’, in Finnie, Wilson, Himsworth, Chris and Walker, Neil (eds.), Edinburgh Essays in Public Law (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 1991), pp. 159–84Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, ‘Beyond the Sovereign State’, Modern Law Review, 56 (1993), pp. 118Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, ‘Liberalism, Nationalism and the Post-Sovereign State’, Political Studies, 44 (1996), pp. 553–67Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, ‘Institutional Normative Order: A Conception of Law’, Cornell Law Review, 82 (1997), pp. 1051–70Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, Questioning Sovereignty: Law, State and Nation in the European Commonwealth (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1999)Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, ‘Doubts about the “Supreme Court” and Reflections on MacCormick v Lord Advocate’, Juridical Review, 2004, pt 3, pp. 236–50Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil, ‘New Unions for Old’, in Miller, William (ed.), Anglo-Scottish Relations from 1900 to Devolution and Beyond (Oxford, Oxford University Press/British Academy, 2005), pp. 249–55Google Scholar
MacCormick, Neil (ed.), The Scottish Debate: Essays on Scottish Nationalism (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1970)Google Scholar
MacDiarmid, Hugh, Albyn [1927], in Hugh MacDiarmid, Albyn: Shorter Books and Monographs, edited by Riach, Alan (Manchester, Carcanet, 1996), pp. 139Google Scholar
MacDiarmid, Hugh, At the Sign of the Thistle (London, Stanley Nott, 1934)Google Scholar
MacDiarmid, Hugh, Cunninghame Graham: A Centenary Study (Glasgow, Caledonian Press, 1952)Google Scholar
MacDiarmid, Hugh, Collected Poems (Edinburgh, Oliver and Boyd, 1962)Google Scholar
MacDiarmid, Hugh, The Company I’ve Kept (London, Hutchinson, 1966)Google Scholar
MacDiarmid, Hugh, A Political Speech (Edinburgh, Reprographia, 1972)Google Scholar
McGrath, John, The Cheviot, the Stag and the Black, Black Oil (London, Bloomsbury, 2015 [1974])Google Scholar
McGrath, John, ‘Scotland: Up against It’, in Brown, Gordon (ed.), The Red Paper on Scotland (Edinburgh, EUSPB, 1975), pp. 134–40Google Scholar
McIlvanney, William, ‘Stands Scotland Where It Did?’, Donaldson lecture, 1987, in his Surviving the Shipwreck (Edinburgh, Mainstream, 1991), pp. 241–53; also in Radical Scotland, no. 30, December 1987/January 1988, pp. 19–22Google Scholar
McIlvanney, William, Dreaming Scotland (Edinburgh, Saltire Society, 2014)Google Scholar
MacIntyre, Alasdair, After Virtue (Notre Dame, University of Notre Dame Press, 1981)Google Scholar
MacIntyre, Alasdair, ‘The Idea of an Educated Public’, in Hirst, Paul (ed.), Education and Values (London, Institute of Education, 1987), pp. 1536Google Scholar
MacIntyre, Alasdair, Whose Justice? Which Rationality? (Notre Dame, University of Notre Dame Press, 1988)Google Scholar
MacIntyre, Alasdair, Three Rival Versions of Moral Enquiry (Notre Dame, University of Notre Dame Press, 1990)Google Scholar
McIntyre, Robert, Some Principles for Scottish Reconstruction (Glasgow, SNP, 1944)Google Scholar
McIntyre, Robert, ‘European Union’, Scots Independent, no. 260, April 1948Google Scholar
McIntyre, Robert, ‘National Party Annual Conference: Chairman’s Opening Remarks’, Scots Independent, no. 262, June 1948Google Scholar
McIntyre, Robert, ‘Nationalists Annual Conference: Chairman’s Opening Remarks’, Scots Independent, no. 275, July 1949Google Scholar
McIntyre, Robert, ‘England Turns Back: The National Idea’, Scots Independent, no. 287, July 1950Google Scholar
McIntyre, Robert, ‘Freedom, Power and Democracy’, Scots Independent, no. 286, June 1950Google Scholar
McIntyre, Robert, ‘The Challenge of Today’, Scots Independent, no. 299, July 1951Google Scholar
MacKay, Donald (ed.), Scotland 1980: The Economics of Self-Government (Edinburgh, Q Press, 1977)Google Scholar
MacKenzie, Agnes Mure, Scotland in Modern Times 1720–1939 (London, W & R Chambers, 1941)Google Scholar
MacKenzie, Agnes Mure, Scottish Principles of Statecraft and Government (Glasgow, Scottish Convention, 1942)Google Scholar
MacKenzie, Agnes Mure, On the Declaration of Arbroath (Edinburgh, Saltire Society, 1951)Google Scholar
MacLeod, Dennis and Russell, Michael, Grasping the Thistle (Glendaruel, Argyll Publishing, 2006)Google Scholar
MacNeill, Duncan H., The Scottish Constitution (Glasgow, SNP, 1943)Google Scholar
MacNeill, Duncan H., The Scottish Realm: An Approach to the Political and Constitutional History of Scotland (Glasgow, A. and J. Donaldson, 1947)Google Scholar
Marwick, William H., Scottish Devolution (London, Fabian Society, 1950)Google Scholar
Massie, Alex, ‘Why Choose Independence if It Means the Same Old, Same Old?’, Think Scotland, 4 December 2012, at www.thinkscotland.org/todays-thinking/articles.html?read_full=11810Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Treason of the Clerks’, Scottish International, vol. 5, no. 6, August 1972, pp. 1820Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Treason of the Clerks II’, Scottish International, vol. 5, no. 7, September 1972, pp. 1417Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Beyond Social Democracy’, in Kennedy, Gavin (ed.), The Radical Approach: Papers on an Independent Scotland (Edinburgh, Palingenesis Press, 1976), pp. 720Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Can Scotland’s Political Myths Be Broken?’, Question, no. 16, 19 November 1976Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Scotland’s Foreign Policy’, Question, no. 12, September 1976Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘The English in Scotland’, New Edinburgh Review, no. 37, spring 1977, pp. 44–5Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Politics and Culture’, Question, no. 25, 1 April 1977Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Review: The Break-Up of Britain’, Question, no. 31, 24 June 1977Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘The Sacred Bullock’, Question, no. 21, 4 February 1977Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘The Implications of Prospective Independence: The Problem of State Power’, Nevis Quarterly, no. 2, January 1979, pp. 11–20Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Labourism or Socialism’, in SNP ’79 Group Papers No. 1, papers discussed at founding meeting, 31 May 1979, Belford Hotel, Edinburgh (no publisher/date), pp. 10–11Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Radical Strategy for an SNP Revival’, Scotsman, 15 June 1979Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘The Nationalism of Hugh MacDiarmid’, in Scott, Paul and Davis, A. C. (eds.), The Age of MacDiarmid (Edinburgh, Mainstream, 1980), pp. 202–23Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Scotland and the British Crisis’, in SNP ’79 Group Papers No. 3, report and commentary on conference on ‘Scotland and the British Crisis’, 23 February 1980 (no publisher/date), pp. 1–11Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘The Case for Left-Wing Nationalism’, SNP ’79 Group Paper No. 6 (Hamilton, Aberdeen People’s Press, 1981)Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Lothian Region: Showdown or Copout?’,’79 Group News, September 1981Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘The Secular Pulpit: Presbyterian Democracy in the Twentieth Century’, Scottish Government Yearbook, 1982, pp. 181–98Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Scotland’s Cruel Paradox’, Radical Scotland, no. 1, February/March 1983, pp. 12–14Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Scottish Universities’, Radical Scotland, no. 7, February/March 1984, pp. 12–13Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘The ’79 Group: A Critical Retrospect’, Cencrastus, no. 21, 1985, pp. 11–16Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘The Crisis of the Democratic Intellect’, Radical Scotland, no. 23, October/November 1986, pp. 16–17Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Norway’s Economic Lessons for Scotland’, Radical Scotland, no. 25, February/March 1987, pp. 14–17Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Scotland in a Wider Europe’, Radical Scotland, no. 40, August/September 1989, pp. 24–6Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Scotland International’, Cencrastus, no. 35, winter 1989, pp. 15–18Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Social Policy and the Constitutional Debate’, Radical Scotland, no. 39, June/July 1989, pp. 16–17Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘The Scottish Middle Class and the National Debate’, in Gallagher, Tom (ed.), Nationalism in the Nineties (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1991), pp. 126–51Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Social Justice and the SNP’, in Hassan, Gerry (ed.), The Modern SNP: From Protest to Power (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2009), pp. 120–34Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, ‘Tackling Scottish Poverty – Principles and Absences: A Critique of the Scottish Government’s Approach to Combating Scotland’s Problem of Poverty and Inequality’, Scottish Affairs, no. 67 (2009), pp. 57–69Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, Arguing for Independence: Evidence, Risk and the Wicked Issues (Edinburgh, Luath Press, 2012)Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen, The Case for Left-Wing Nationalism, edited by Maxwell, Jamie (Edinburgh, Luath Press, 2013)Google Scholar
Maxwell, Stephen (ed.), Scotland, Multinationals and the Third World (Edinburgh, Mainstream, 1982)Google Scholar
Miliband, Ralph, Parliamentary Socialism (London, Allen & Unwin, 1961)Google Scholar
Muirhead, Roland, McIntyre, Robert and Dott, Mary, ‘The Scottish Nation’s Claim of Right to UNO’, Scots Independent, no. 254, October 1947Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘The English Working Class’, New Left Review, no. 24, 1964, pp. 43–57Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘The Nature of the Labour Party I’, New Left Review, no. 27, 1964, pp. 38–65Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘The Nature of the Labour Party II’, New Left Review, no. 28, 1964, pp. 33–62Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Labour Imperialism’, New Left Review, no. 32, 1965, pp. 3–15Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘The Three Dreams of Scottish Nationalism’, New Left Review, no. 49, 1968, pp. 3–18Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘The Three Dreams of Scottish Nationalism’, in Miller, Karl (ed.), Memoirs of a Modern Scotland (London, Faber and Faber, 1970), pp. 3454Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Culture and Nationalism: An Open Letter from Tom Nairn’, Scottish International, vol. 6, no. 4, April 1973, pp. 89Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, The Left against Europe? (London, Pelican, 1973)Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Scotland and Europe’, New Left Review, no. 83, 1974, pp. 57–82Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘The Modern Janus’, New Left Review, no. 94, 1975, pp. 3–29Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Old Nationalism and New Nationalism’, in Brown, Gordon (ed.), The Red Paper on Scotland (Edinburgh, EUSPB, 1975), pp. 2257Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘The National Question’, Scottish Worker, vol. 3, no. 10, December 1976Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘The Radical Approach’, Question, no. 10, July 1976Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Revolutionaries versus Parliamentarists’, Question, no. 16, 19 November 1976Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Scotland the Misfit’, Question, no. 13, 8 October 1976Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, The Break-Up of Britain (London, New Left Books, 1977)Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘The SLP: Report on the First Year of a New Party’, Planet, no. 37/38, May 1977, pp. 14–17Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Twilight of the British State’, New Left Review, no. 101/102, 1977, pp. 3–61Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘After the Referendum’, New Edinburgh Review, no. 46, summer 1979, pp. 3–10Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Scotland after the Elections’, in SNP ’79 Group Papers No. 1, papers discussed at founding meeting, 31 May 1979, Belford Hotel, Edinburgh (no publisher/date), pp. 5–7Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Dr Jekyll’s Case: Model or Warning?’, Bulletin of Scottish Politics, no. 1, autumn 1980, pp. 136–42Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, The Enchanted Glass (London, Radius, 1988)Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘The Timeless Girn’, in Edwards, Owen Dudley (ed.), A Claim of Right for Scotland (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1989), pp. 163–78Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Scottish Identity: A Cause Unwon’, Chapman, 67, winter 1991/92, pp. 212Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Gender Goes Top of the Agenda’ [1994], in MacKay, Fiona and Breitenbach, Esther (eds.), Women and Contemporary Scottish Politics: An Anthology (Edinburgh, Polygon, 2001), pp. 195–6Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, Faces of Nationalism (London, Verso, 1997)Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, After Britain (London, Granta, 2000)Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Twenty-First Century Hindsight: Break-Up Twenty-Five Years on’, in Nairn, Tom, The Break-Up of Britain (3rd ed., Altona, Common Ground, 2003), pp. xixxxGoogle Scholar
Nairn, Tom, Gordon Brown: Bard of Britishness (Cardiff, Institute of Welsh Affairs, 2006)Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Preface’ to Maxwell, Stephen, The Case for Left-Wing Nationalism, edited by Maxwell, Jamie (Edinburgh, Luath Press, 2013), pp. 912Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Globalisation and Nationalism: The New Deal’, Edinburgh lecture, 4 March 2008, in Nairn, Tom, Old Nations, Auld Enemies, New Times: Selected Essays, edited by Maxwell, Jamie and Ramand, Pete (Edinburgh, Luath Press, 2014), pp. 396405Google Scholar
Nairn, Tom, ‘Old Nation, New Age’, April 2014, in Nairn, Tom, Old Nations, Auld Enemies, New Times: Selected Essays, edited by Maxwell, Jamie and Ramand, Pete (Edinburgh, Luath Press, 2014), pp. 416–19Google Scholar
Page, Edward, ‘Michael Hechter’s Internal Colonial Thesis: Some Theoretical and Methodological Problems’, European Journal of Political Research, 6 (1978), pp. 295317Google Scholar
Paterson, Lindsay, ‘What Kind of Scotland?’, Crann-Tàra, no. 1, winter 1977Google Scholar
Paton, H. J., The Claim of Scotland (London, George Allen & Unwin, 1968)Google Scholar
Reid, George, ‘A State of Flux’, Question, no. 5, February 1976Google Scholar
Reid, George, ‘Oh, to Be in Britain?’, Donaldson lecture, 1995 (Edinburgh, SNP, September 1995)Google Scholar
Ross, Jim, ‘Towards a New Scotland: A Choice of Weapons’, Cencrastus, no. 35, winter 1989, pp. 25–8Google Scholar
Salmond, Alex, ‘The Economics of Independence’, West Lothian Standard, spring 1977Google Scholar
Salmond, Alex, ‘Scotland in Europe: Living with the Single European Act’, Radical Scotland, no. 34, August/September 1988, pp. 10–11Google Scholar
Salmond, Alex, ‘Unleash the Power to Create Our Own Tiger Economy’, Herald, 20 March 1996Google Scholar
Salmond, Alex, ‘Irish Show Scots Road to Success’, Irish Times, 1 May 1997Google Scholar
Salmond, Alex, ‘Learning to Love the Euro’, Herald, 7 November 1997Google Scholar
Salmond, Alex, The Economics of Independence (Glasgow, Strathclyde University Economics Department, 2003)Google Scholar
Salmond, Alex, ‘Free to Prosper: Creating the Celtic Lion Economy’, speech, Harvard University, 31 March 2008, at www.gov.scot/News/Speeches/Speeches/First-Minister/harvard-universityGoogle Scholar
Salmond, Alex, ‘Scotland’s Place in the World’, Hugo Young lecture, 24 January 2012, at www.theguardian.com/politics/2012/jan/25/alex-salmond-hugo-young-lectureGoogle Scholar
Salmond, Alex, ‘The Six Unions’, speech, Nigg Fabrication Yard, 12 July 2013, at http://news.scotland.gov.uk/Speeches-Briefings/The-six-unions-introduction-51e.aspxGoogle Scholar
Salmond, Alex et al., ‘The Scottish Industrial Resistance’,’79 Group Paper No. 7 (Hamilton, Aberdeen People’s Press, 1982)Google Scholar
Scottish Centre for Economic and Social Research, Monetary Policy Options for an Independent Scotland (Edinburgh, Scottish Centre for Economic and Social Research, n.d. [1989])Google Scholar
Scottish Centre for Economic and Social Research, The Power of Small Nations in the New Europe (Edinburgh, Scottish Centre for Economic and Social Research, 1994)Google Scholar
Scottish Constitutional Convention, Towards Scotland’s Parliament (Edinburgh, Scottish Constitutional Convention, 1990)Google Scholar
Scottish Government, Scotland’s Future: Your Guide to an Independent Scotland (Edinburgh, Scottish Government, November 2013)Google Scholar
Scottish Government, The Scottish Independence Bill: A Consultation on an Interim Constitution for Scotland (Edinburgh, Scottish Government, 2014)Google Scholar
Sillars, Jim, ‘Let’s Sit at the Top Table in Europe’, The Highway, July 1975Google Scholar
Sillars, Jim, ‘Why I’m Not in the SNP’, Crann-Tàra, no. 1, winter 1977Google Scholar
Sillars, Jim, Scotland: Moving on and up in Europe (no publisher/place of publication, June 1985)Google Scholar
Sillars, Jim, Scotland: The Case for Optimism (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1986)Google Scholar
Sillars, Jim, No Turning Back: The Case for Scottish Independence within the European Community and How We Face the Challenge of 1992 (no publisher/place of publication, August 1988)Google Scholar
Sillars, Jim, Independence in Europe (Glasgow, SNP, June 1989)Google Scholar
Sillars, Jim, ‘Freedom and Order’, Cencrastus, no. 34, summer 1989, pp. 14–17Google Scholar
Sillars, Jim, In Place of Fear II: A Socialist Programme for an Independent Scotland (Glasgow, Vagabond Voices, 2014)Google Scholar
Sillars, Jim, ‘Why Scottish Nationalists Should Back Brexit’, CommonSpace, 9 May 2016, at www.commonspace.scot/articles/3976/jim-sillars-why-scottish-nationalists-should-back-brexitGoogle Scholar
Simpson, David, The Economics of Self-Government (Edinburgh, SNP Research Office, n.d. [c. 1982])Google Scholar
Smith, T. B., British Justice: The Scottish Contribution (London, Stevens & Sons, 1961)Google Scholar
Smout, T. C., ‘Centre and Periphery in History; With Some Thoughts on Scotland as a Case Study’, Journal of Common Market Studies, 18 (1980), pp. 256–71Google Scholar
Smout, T. C., ‘Scotland and England: Is Dependency a Symptom or a Cause of Underdevelopment?’, Review, 3 (1980), pp. 601–30Google Scholar
Snow, C. P., ‘Miasma, Darkness and Torpidity’, New Statesman, 11 August 1961Google Scholar
SNP, Statement of Aim and Policy of the Scottish National Party (Stirling, Scots Independent, January 1947)Google Scholar
SNP, The SNP and You: Aims and Policy of the Scottish National Party (Edinburgh, SNP, 1964)Google Scholar
SNP, The New Scotland – Your Scotland (Edinburgh, SNP, 1970)Google Scholar
SNP, For the Good of Scotland: Towards a Better Scotland (Edinburgh, SNP, November 1995)Google Scholar
Spence, Lewis, The National Party of Scotland (Glasgow, National Party of Scotland, 1928) [reprinted from Edinburgh Review, 1928]Google Scholar
Stewart Black, Charles, The Case for Scotland (Edinburgh, National Party of Scotland, 1930)Google Scholar
Stewart Black, Charles, Scottish Nationalism: Its Inspiration and Aims (Glasgow, National Party of Scotland, 1933)Google Scholar
Sturgeon, Nicola, ‘Bringing the Powers Home to Build a Better Nation’, speech, Strathclyde University, 3 December 2012Google Scholar
Sturgeon, Nicola, ‘The Constitutional Future of an Independent Scotland’, speech, Edinburgh Centre for Constitutional Law, 16 June 2014, at https://news.gov.scot/speeches-and-briefings/the-constitutional-future-of-an-independent-scotlandGoogle Scholar
Tait, Bob, ‘The Left, the SNP and Oil’, in Brown, Gordon (ed.), The Red Paper on Scotland (Edinburgh, EUSPB, 1975), pp. 125–33Google Scholar
Tait, Bob, ‘Scottish Education in Dubious Battle’, Cencrastus, no. 25, spring 1987, pp. 4–5Google Scholar
Tamir, Yael, Liberal Nationalism (Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press, 1993)Google Scholar
Taylor, Charles, Sources of the Self (Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press, 1989)Google Scholar
Taylor, Charles, Reconciling the Solitudes: Essays on Canadian Federalism and Nationalism (Quebec City, McGill-Queens University Press, 1993)Google Scholar
Thompson, E. P., ‘The Peculiarities of the English’, Socialist Register, 2 (1965), pp. 311–62Google Scholar
Thomson, George, Caledonia or the Fate of the Scots (London, Kegan Paul, 1927)Google Scholar
Turnbull, Ronald, ‘Reviving Critique’, Irish Review, no. 28, winter 2001, pp. 98–107Google Scholar
Turnbull, Ronald, ‘Nairn’s Nationalisms’, in Bell, Eleanor and Miller, Gavin (eds.), Scotland in Theory (Edinburgh, Rodopi, 2004), pp. 3548Google Scholar
Turnbull, Ronald and Beveridge, Craig, ‘Philosophy and Autonomy’, Cencrastus, no. 3, summer 1980, pp. 2–4Google Scholar
Turnbull, Ronald and Beveridge, Craig, ‘Scottish Nationalist, British Marxist: The Strange Case of Tom Nairn’, Cencrastus, no. 13, summer 1983, pp. 2–5Google Scholar
Turnbull, Ronald and Beveridge, Craig, ‘The Historiography of External Control’, Cencrastus, no. 23, June/August 1986, pp. 41–4Google Scholar
Turnbull, Ronald and Beveridge, Craig, ‘Towards Postmodernism: An Introduction to MacIntyre’, Cencrastus, no. 26, autumn 1988, pp. 1–3Google Scholar
Wallerstein, Immanuel, The Modern World-System I (New York, Academic Press, 1974)Google Scholar
Wallerstein, Immanuel, ‘One Man’s Meat: The Scottish Great Leap Forward’, Review, 3 (1980), pp. 631–40Google Scholar
Wanniski, Jude, ‘Taxes, Revenues, and the “Laffer Curve”’, Public Interest, winter 1978, pp. 3–16Google Scholar
Welsh, Irvine, ‘Scottish Independence and British Unity’, Bella Caledonia, 10 January 2013, at https://bellacaledonia.org.uk/2013/01/10/irvine-welsh-on-scottish-independence-and-british-unityGoogle Scholar
Williamson, Neil, ‘Ten Years After – The Revolutionary Left in Scotland’, Scottish Government Yearbook, 1979, pp. 61–77Google Scholar
Wolfe, Billy, Scotland Lives (Edinburgh, Reprographia, 1973)Google Scholar
Women’s Claim of Right Group (ed.), A Woman’s Claim of Right (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1991)Google Scholar
Wright, Kenyon, The People Say Yes (Glendaruel, Argyll, 1997)Google Scholar
Young, Douglas, Quislings in Scotland (Glasgow, Scottish Secretariat, 1942)Google Scholar
Young, Douglas, The Free-Minded Scot (Glasgow, Scottish Secretariat, 1942)Google Scholar
Young, Douglas, Fascism for the Highlands? Gauleiter for Wales? (Glasgow, SNP, 1943)Google Scholar
Young, Douglas, An Appeal to Scots Honour: A Vindication of the Right of the Scottish People to Freedom from Industrial Conscription and Bureaucratic Despotism under the Treaty of Union with England (Glasgow, Scottish Secretariat, 1944)Google Scholar
Young, Douglas, British Invasion of Scottish Rights: Douglas Young’s Speech in Paisley Sheriff Court on 12th June (Glasgow, Scottish Secretariat, 1944)Google Scholar
Young, Douglas, The International Importance of Scottish Nationalism (Glasgow, Scottish Secretariat, 1947)Google Scholar
Young, Douglas, Chasing an Ancient Greek (London, Hollis & Carter, 1950)Google Scholar
Young, J. D., The Rousing of the Scottish Working Class (London, Croom Helm, 1979)Google Scholar
Anderson, Robert, Education and Opportunity in Victorian Scotland (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1983)Google Scholar
Anderson, Robert, ‘Education and Society in Modern Scotland: A Comparative Perspective’, History of Education Quarterly, 25 (1985), pp. 459–81Google Scholar
Anderson, Robert, ‘Democracy and Intellect’, Cencrastus, no. 25, Spring 1987, pp. 3–4Google Scholar
Anderson, Robert, ‘The Scottish University Tradition: Past and Future’, in Carter, Jennifer and Withrington, Donald (eds.), Scottish Universities: Distinctiveness and Diversity (Edinburgh, John Donald, 1992), pp. 6778Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, Stone Voices (London, Granta, 2002)Google Scholar
Ascherson, Neal, Tom Nairn: ‘Painting Nationalism Red?’ (Dundee, Democratic Left Scotland, 2018)Google Scholar
Aughey, Arthur, The Politics of Englishness (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2007)Google Scholar
Barnes, Eddie, ‘What the New Form of Independence Is All about’, Scotsman, 14 May 2011Google Scholar
Barr, Jean, ‘Re-framing the Democratic Intellect’, Scottish Affairs, no. 55 (2006), pp. 23–46Google Scholar
Bayne, Ian O., ‘The Impact of 1979 on the SNP’, in Gallagher, Tom (ed.), Nationalism in the Nineties (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1991), pp. 4665Google Scholar
Bell, Eleanor, Questioning Scotland: Literature, Nationalism, Postmodernism (Basingstoke, Palgrave, 2004)Google Scholar
Bell, Eleanor and Miller, Gavin (eds.), Scotland in Theory (Edinburgh, Rodopi, 2004)Google Scholar
Blackburn, Dean, ‘Still the Stranger at the Feast? Ideology and the Study of Twentieth Century British Politics’, Journal of Political Ideologies, 22 (2017), pp. 116–30Google Scholar
Blackledge, Paul, ‘Freedom, Desire and Revolution: Alasdair MacIntyre’s Early Marxist Ethics’, History of Political Thought, 26 (2004), pp. 696720Google Scholar
Blane, Neil and Hutchison, David with Hassan, Gerry (eds.), Scotland’s Referendum and the Media (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2016)Google Scholar
Bourke, Richard, ‘Reflections on the Political Thought of the Irish Revolution’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 27 (2017), pp. 175–91Google Scholar
Brand, Jack, The National Movement in Scotland (London, Routledge, 1978)Google Scholar
Brotherstone, Terry and Ditchburn, David, ‘1320 and a’ that: The Declaration of Arbroath and the Remaking of Scottish History’, in Brotherstone, Terry and Ditchburn, David (eds.), Freedom and Authority: Scotland c.1050–c. 1650 (East Linton, Tuckwell Press, 2000), pp. 1031Google Scholar
Brown, Alice, ‘Deepening Democracy: Women and the Scottish Parliament’ [1998], in MacKay, Fiona and Breitenbach, Esther (eds.), Women and Contemporary Scottish Politics: An Anthology (Edinburgh, Polygon, 2001), pp. 213–29Google Scholar
Brown Swan, Coree and Petersohn, Bettina, ‘The Currency Issue’, in Keating, Michael (ed.), Debating Scotland: Issues of Independence and Union in the 2014 Referendum (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2017), pp. 6583Google Scholar
Bulmer, W. Elliot, ‘An Analysis of the Scottish National Party’s Draft Constitution for Scotland’, Parliamentary Affairs, 64 (2011), pp. 674–93CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bulmer, W. Constituting Scotland: The Scottish National Movement and the Westminster Model (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2016)Google Scholar
Burness, Catriona, ‘Drunk Women Don’t Look at Thistles: Women and the SNP 1934–94’, Scotlands, 2 (1994), pp. 131–54Google Scholar
Cameron, Ewen, Impaled upon a Thistle: Scotland since 1880 (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2010)Google Scholar
Chun, Lin, The British New Left (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 1993)Google Scholar
Cohen, Anthony, ‘Personal Nationalism: A Scottish View of Some Rites, Rights, and Wrongs’, American Ethnologist, 23 (1996), pp. 802–15Google Scholar
Cocks, Joan, ‘In Defence of Ethnicity, Locality, Nationality: The Curious Case of Tom Nairn’, in Cocks, Joan, Passion and Paradox: Intellectuals Confront the National Question (Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press, 2002), pp. 111–32Google Scholar
Cowan, E. J., ‘Identity, Freedom, and the Declaration of Arbroath’, in Broun, Dauvit, Finlay, Richard and Lynch, Michael (eds.), Image and Identity: The Making and Re-making of Scotland through the Ages (Edinburgh, John Donald, 1998), pp. 3868Google Scholar
Craig, Cairns, Out of History (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1996)Google Scholar
Craig, Cairns, The Modern Scottish Novel (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 1999)Google Scholar
Craig, Cairns, Intending Scotland (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2009)Google Scholar
Craig, Cairns, The Wealth of the Nation: Scotland, Culture and Independence (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2018)Google Scholar
Craig, Carol, The Scots’ Crisis of Confidence (Glendaruel, Argyll Publishing, 2011 [2003])Google Scholar
Crawford, Robert, Devolving English Literature (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2000)Google Scholar
Crawford, Robert, Scotland’s Books (London, Penguin, 2009)Google Scholar
Crawford, Robert, Bannockburns: Scottish Independence and Literary Imagination, 1314–2014 (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2014)Google Scholar
Cumbers, Andrew, ‘The Scottish Independence Referendum and the Dysfunctional Economic Geography of the UK’, Political Geography, 41 (2014), pp. 33–6Google Scholar
Dalle Mulle, Emmanuel, ‘New Trends in Justifications for National Self-Determination: Evidence from Scotland and Flanders’, Ethnopolitics, 15 (2016), pp. 211–29Google Scholar
Dalle Mulle, Emmanuel and Serrano, Ivano, ‘Between a Principled and a Consequentialist Logic: Theory and Practice of Secession in Catalonia and Scotland’, Nations and Nationalism, 25 (2019), pp. 630–51Google Scholar
Dardanelli, Paolo, Between Two Unions: Europeanisation and Scottish Devolution (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2006)Google Scholar
Davidson, Neil, ‘Alasdair MacIntyre as a Marxist’, in Davidson, Neil, Holding Fast to an Image of the Past (Chicago, Haymarket, 2014), pp. 129–81Google Scholar
Davidson, Neil, ‘Antonio Gramsci’s Reception in Scotland’, in Davidson, Neil, Holding Fast to an Image of the Past (Chicago, Haymarket Books, 2014), pp. 253–86Google Scholar
Davidson, Neil, ‘Tom Nairn and the Inevitability of Nationalism’, in Davidson, Neil, Holding Fast to an Image of the Past (Chicago, Haymarket Books, 2014), pp. 144Google Scholar
Davidson, Neil, ‘A Scottish Watershed’, New Left Review, no. 89, 2014, pp. 5–26Google Scholar
Davis, Madeleine, ‘The Marxism of the British New Left’, Journal of Political Ideologies, 11 (2006), pp. 335–58Google Scholar
Davis, Madeleine, ‘Arguing Affluence: New Left Contributions to the Socialist Debate 1957–63’, Twentieth Century British History, 23 (2012), pp. 496528Google Scholar
Davis, Madeleine, ‘Reappraising British Socialist Humanism’, Journal of Political Ideologies, 18 (2013), pp. 125Google Scholar
Davis, Madeleine, ‘“Among the Ordinary People”: New Left Involvement in Working Class Mobilisation 1956–68’, History Workshop Journal, 86 (2018), pp. 133–59Google Scholar
Devine, Tom, ‘The Break-Up of Britain? Scotland and the End of Empire’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 16 (2006), pp. 163–80Google Scholar
Devine, Tom, To the Ends of the Earth: Scotland’s Global Diaspora (London, Penguin, 2011)Google Scholar
Devine, Tom, Independence or Union: Scotland’s Past and Scotland’s Future (London, Penguin, 2016)Google Scholar
Donaldson, William, ‘Agnes Mure MacKenzie (1891–1955)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, Oxford University Press, online ed., 28 September 2006), at https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/57342Google Scholar
Douglas, Dick, At the Helm: The Life and Times of Dr Robert D McIntyre (Portessie, Buckie, NPFI Publications, 1996)Google Scholar
Drucker, Henry, Breakaway: The Scottish Labour Party (Edinburgh, EUSPB, 1978)Google Scholar
Drucker, Henry, ‘Crying Wolfe: Recent Divisions in the SNP’, Political Quarterly, 50 (1979), pp. 503–8Google Scholar
Dworkin, Dennis, Cultural Marxism in Post-War Britain (Durham, NC, Duke University Press, 1997)Google Scholar
Edgerton, David, The Rise and Fall of the British Nation: A Twentieth Century History (London, Allen Lane, 2018)Google Scholar
Erdos, David, ‘Charter 88 and the Constitutional Reform Movement: A Retrospective’, Parliamentary Affairs, 62 (2009), pp. 537–51Google Scholar
Erskine, Caroline, ‘George Buchanan, English Whigs and Royalists and the Canon of Political Theory’, in Erskine, Caroline and Mason, Roger (eds.), George Buchanan: Political Thought in Early Modern Britain and Europe (Aldershot, Ashgate, 2012), pp. 229–45Google Scholar
Farmer, Lindsay, ‘Under the Shadow over Parliament House: The Strange Case of Legal Nationalism’, in Farmer, Lindsay and Veitch, Scott (eds.), The State of Scots Law: Law and Government after the Devolution Settlement (London, Bloomsbury, 2001), pp. 151–64Google Scholar
Fieldhouse, Edward and Prosser, Christopher, ‘The Limits of Partisan Loyalty: How the Independence Referendum Cost Labour’, Electoral Studies, 52 (2018), pp. 1125Google Scholar
Finlay, Richard, ‘“For or against?” Scottish Nationalists and the British Empire 1919–39’, Scottish Historical Review, 71 (1992), pp. 184206Google Scholar
Finlay, Richard, ‘Controlling the Past: Scottish Historiography and Scottish Identity in the 19th and 20th Centuries’, Scottish Affairs, no. 9 (1994), pp. 127–42Google Scholar
Finlay, Richard, Independent and Free: Scottish Politics and the Origins of the Scottish National Party 1918–45 (Edinburgh, John Donald, 1994)Google Scholar
Finlay, Richard, ‘National Identity in Crisis: Politicians, Intellectuals and the “End of Scotland”’, History, 79 (1994), pp. 242–59Google Scholar
Finlay, Richard, ‘Thatcherism, Unionism and Nationalism: A Comparative Study of Scotland and Wales’, in Jackson, Ben and Saunders, Robert (eds.), Making Thatcher’s Britain (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2012), pp. 165–79Google Scholar
Finlay, Richard, ‘Thomas Hill Gibson (1893–1975)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, Oxford University Press, online ed., 4 October 2012), at https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/71329Google Scholar
Finlay, Richard, ‘Robert McIntyre (1913–98)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, Oxford University Press, online ed., 28 May 2015), at https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/59442Google Scholar
Finlay, Richard, ‘Robert McIntyre’, in Hassan, Gerry and Mitchell, James (eds.), Scottish National Party Leaders (London, Biteback, 2016), pp. 177–99Google Scholar
Forgacs, David, ‘Gramsci and Marxism in Britain’, New Left Review, no. 176, 1989, pp. 70–88Google Scholar
Freeden, Michael, ‘Stranger at the Feast: Ideology and Public Policy in Twentieth-Century Britain’, Twentieth Century British History, 1 (1990), pp. 934Google Scholar
Freeden, Michael, Ideologies and Political Theory (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1996)Google Scholar
Freeden, Michael, ‘The Coming of the Welfare State’, in Ball, Terence and Bellamy, Richard (eds.), Cambridge History of Twentieth Century Political Thought (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2003), pp. 544Google Scholar
Freeman, Tom, ‘Isobel Lindsay’s Radical Road to Devolution’, Holyrood, 1 March 2019, at www.holyrood.com/articles/inside-politics/isobel-lindsays-radical-road-devolutionGoogle Scholar
Fry, Michael, Patronage and Principle: A Political History of Modern Scotland (Aberdeen, Aberdeen University Press, 1987)Google Scholar
Gardiner, Michael, The Cultural Roots of British Devolution (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2004)Google Scholar
Geekie, Jack and Levy, Roger, ‘Devolution and the Tartanisation of the Labour Party’, Parliamentary Affairs, 42 (1989), pp. 399411Google Scholar
Geoghegan, Peter, The People’s Referendum (Edinburgh, Luath Press, 2015)Google Scholar
Gibbs, Ewan, ‘The Moral Economy of the Scottish Coalfields: Managing Deindustrialisation, c. 1947–83’, Enterprise and Society, 19 (2018), pp. 124–52Google Scholar
Gibbs, Ewan and Scothorne, Rory, ‘“Origins of the Present Crisis?”: The Emergence of “Left-Wing” Scottish Nationalism, 1956–79’, in Smith, Evan and Worley, Matthew (eds.), Waiting for the Revolution: The British Far Left from 1956 (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2017), pp. 163–81Google Scholar
Glyn, Andrew (ed.), Social Democracy in Neo-Liberal Times: The Left and Economic Policy since 1980 (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2001)Google Scholar
Gow, David, ‘Obituary: Bob Tait, Writer and Intellectual’, Scotsman, 2 January 2018Google Scholar
Gunn, Linda and Cleary, Richard, ‘Wasps in a Jam Jar: Scottish Literary Magazines and Political Culture 1979–99’, in McNair, Aimee and Ryder, Jacqueline (eds.), Further from the Frontiers (Aberdeen, Centre for Irish and Scottish Studies, 2009), pp. 4152Google Scholar
Gutiérrez, Ramón A., ‘Internal Colonialism: An American Theory of Race’, Du Bois Review, 1 (2004), pp. 281–95Google Scholar
Hames, Scott, The Literary Politics of Scottish Devolution (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2019)Google Scholar
Hamilton, Scott, The Crisis of Theory: E. P. Thompson, the New Left and Postwar British Politics (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2011)Google Scholar
Hanham, H. J., Scottish Nationalism (London, Faber, 1969)Google Scholar
Harris, Jose, ‘Political Thought and the Welfare State 1870–1940: An Intellectual Framework for British Social Policy’, Past and Present, 135 (1992), pp. 116–41Google Scholar
Harvie, Christopher, ‘Nationalism, Journalism and Cultural Politics’, in Gallagher, Tom (ed.), Nationalism in the Nineties (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1991), pp. 2945Google Scholar
Harvie, Christopher, Fool’s Gold: The Story of North Sea Oil (London, Penguin, 1995)Google Scholar
Harvie, Christopher, Scotland and Nationalism: Scottish Society and Politics 1707 to the Present (London, Routledge, 2004)Google Scholar
Harvie, Christopher, ‘William Wolfe’, in Hassan, Gerry and Mitchell, James (eds.), Scottish National Party Leaders (London, Biteback, 2016), pp. 247–64Google Scholar
Hassan, Gerry, ‘The Forward March of Scottish Nationalism’, Renewal, 19 (2011), pp. 5063Google Scholar
Hassan, Gerry, Caledonia Dreaming: The Quest for a Different Scotland (Edinburgh, Luath Press, 2014)Google Scholar
Hassan, Gerry, Independence of the Scottish Mind: Elite Narratives, Public Spaces and the Making of a Modern Nation (Basingstoke, Palgrave, 2014)Google Scholar
Hassan, Gerry, ‘Jim Sillars’, in Hassan, Gerry and Mitchell, James (eds.), Scottish National Party Leaders (London, Biteback, 2016), pp. 409–34Google Scholar
Hassan, Gerry and Shaw, Eric, The Strange Death of Labour Scotland (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2013)Google Scholar
Hassan, Gerry (ed.), The Modern SNP (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2009)Google Scholar
Hassan, Gerry and Mitchell, James (eds.), After Independence (Edinburgh, Luath Press, 2013)Google Scholar
Hassan, Gerry and Mitchell, James (eds.), Scottish National Party Leaders (London, Biteback, 2016)Google Scholar
Hearn, Jonathan, Claiming Scotland: National Identity and Liberal Culture (Edinburgh, Polygon, 2000)Google Scholar
Hearn, Jonathan, Rethinking Nationalism (Basingstoke, Palgrave, 2006)Google Scholar
Hearn, Jonathan, ‘Nationalism and Normality: A Comment on the Scottish Independence Referendum’, Dialectical Anthropology, 38 (2014), pp. 505–12Google Scholar
Hepburn, Eve, Using Europe: Territorial Party Strategies in a Multi-Level System (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2010)Google Scholar
Herdman, John, Another Country: An Era in Scottish Politics and Letters (Edinburgh, Thirsty Books, 2013)Google Scholar
Hill, Christopher, ‘Nations of Peace: Nuclear Disarmament and the Making of National Identity in Scotland and Wales’, Twentieth Century British History, 27 (2016), pp. 2650Google Scholar
Horn, Gerd-Rainer, The Spirit of ’68: Rebellion in Western Europe and North America, 1956–76 (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2007)Google Scholar
Howe, Stephen, ‘Some Intellectual Origins of Charter 88’, Parliamentary Affairs, 62 (2009), pp. 552–67Google Scholar
Hutcheon, Paul, ‘Salmond Causes Rival to Change “Dangerous” Book’, Sunday Herald, 1 October 2006Google Scholar
Hutchinson, Francis and Burkitt, Brian, The Political Economy of Social Credit and Guild Socialism (London, Routledge, 1997)Google Scholar
Ichijo, Atsuko, Scottish Nationalism and the Idea of Europe (London, Routledge, 2004)Google Scholar
Immerwahr, Daniel, ‘Polanyi in the United States: Peter Drucker, Karl Polanyi and the Mid-Century Critique of Economic Society’, Journal of the History of Ideas, 70 (2009), pp. 445–66Google Scholar
Invernizzi Accetti, Carlo, What Is Christian Democracy? (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2019)Google Scholar
Jack, Ian, ‘Nicola Sturgeon Used to Be a “Historical Fiction Geek”. But Not Any More’, Guardian, 25 April 2015Google Scholar
Jackson, Ben, Equality and the British Left (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2007)Google Scholar
Jackson, Ben, ‘Property-Owning Democracy: A Short History’, in O’Neill, Martin and Williamson, Thad (eds.), Property-Owning Democracy: Rawls and Beyond (Oxford, Wiley-Blackwell, 2012), pp. 3352Google Scholar
Jackson, Ben, ‘Social Democracy’, in Freeden, Michael, Sargeant, Lyman Tower and Stears, Marc (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Political Ideologies (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2013), pp. 348–63Google Scholar
Jackson, Ben, ‘A Union of Hearts? Republican Social Democracy and Scottish Nationalism’, in Schattle, Hans and Nuttall, Jeremy (eds.), Making Social Democrats: Citizens, Mindsets, Realities: Essays for David Marquand (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2018), pp. 161–73Google Scholar
Jones, Peter, ‘SNP Leader Signals Economic Policy Shift’, Scotsman, 7 August 1993Google Scholar
Jones, Peter, ‘Salmond Set for Test of New Policies’, Scotsman, 18 August 1993Google Scholar
Jones, Peter, ‘Dedicated Leader of the Band’, Scotsman, 19 August 1993Google Scholar
Jones, Peter, ‘Existential and Utilitarian Nationalism in Scotland’, in Müller, Klaus Peter (ed.), Scotland 2014 and Beyond – Coming of Age and Loss of Innocence? (Frankfurt am Main, Peter Lang, 2015), pp. 137–64Google Scholar
Jones, Tudor, The Revival of British Liberalism (Basingstoke, Palgrave, 2011)Google Scholar
Kearney, Richard, ‘Towards a Post-Nationalist Archipelago’, Edinburgh Review, no. 103, 2000, pp. 21–35Google Scholar
Kearton, Antonia, ‘Imagining the “Mongrel Nation”: Political Uses of History in the Recent Scottish Nationalist Movement’, National Identities, 7 (2005), pp. 2350Google Scholar
Keating, Michael, Plurinational Democracy: Stateless Nations in a Post-Sovereignty Era (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2001)Google Scholar
Keating, Michael, The Independence of Scotland (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2009)Google Scholar
Keating, Michael (ed.), Debating Scotland: Issues of Independence and Union in the 2014 Referendum (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2017)Google Scholar
Keating, Michael and Bleiman, Richard, Labour and Scottish Nationalism (London, Macmillan, 1979)Google Scholar
Kemp, Arnold, Hollow Drum: Scotland since the War (Glasgow, Neil Wilson Publishing, 1993)Google Scholar
Kenny, Meryl, ‘Engendering the Independence Debate’, Scottish Affairs, 23 (2014), pp. 323–31Google Scholar
Kenny, Michael, The First New Left (London, Lawrence & Wishart, 1995)Google Scholar
Kenny, Michael, The Politics of English Nationhood (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2014)Google Scholar
Kidd, Colin, Subverting Scotland’s Past (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1993)Google Scholar
Kidd, Colin, ‘Sovereignty and the Scottish Constitution before 1707’, Juridical Review, 2004, pt 3, pp. 225–36Google Scholar
Kidd, Colin, ‘Lord Dacre and the Politics of the Scottish Enlightenment’, Scottish Historical Review, 84 (2005), pp. 202–20Google Scholar
Kidd, Colin, Union and Unionisms: Political Thought in Scotland, 1500–2000 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2008)Google Scholar
Lee, Geoffrey, ‘North Sea Oil and Scottish Nationalism’, Political Quarterly, 47 (1976), pp. 307–17Google Scholar
Leith, Murray Stewart and Soule, Daniel, Political Discourse and National Identity in Scotland (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2011)Google Scholar
Levy, Roger, Scottish Nationalism at the Crossroads (Edinburgh, Scottish Academic Press, 1990)Google Scholar
Little, Gavin, ‘A Flag in the Wind: MacCormick v Lord Advocate’, in Grant, John and Sutherland, Elaine (eds.), Scots Law Tales (Dundee, Dundee University Press, 2010), pp. 2344Google Scholar
Lyall, Scott, Hugh MacDiarmid’s Poetry and Politics of Place: Imagining a Scottish Republic (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2006)Google Scholar
Lyall, Scott, ‘Hugh MacDiarmid and the Scottish Renaissance’, in Carruthers, Gerard and McIlvanney, Liam (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Scottish Literature (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2012), pp. 173–87Google Scholar
Lynch, Peter, Minority Nationalism and European Integration (Cardiff, University of Wales Press, 1996)Google Scholar
Lynch, Peter, ‘From Social Democracy Back to No Ideology – The Scottish National Party and Ideological Change in a Multi-Level Electoral Setting’, Regional and Federal Studies, 19 (2009), pp. 619–37Google Scholar
Lynch, Peter, SNP: The History of the Scottish National Party (Cardiff, Welsh Academic Press, 2013)Google Scholar
McCreadie, Robert, ‘Scottish Identity and the Constitution’, in Crick, Bernard (ed.), National Identities (Oxford, Blackwell/Political Quarterly, 1990), pp. 3856Google Scholar
McCrone, David, ‘Post-Nationalism and the Decline of the Nation State’, Radical Scotland, no. 49, February/March 1991, pp. 6–8Google Scholar
McCrone, David, Understanding Scotland: The Sociology of a Nation (2nd ed., London, Routledge, 2001)Google Scholar
McCrone, David, ‘Cultural Capital in an Understated Nation: The Case of Scotland’, British Journal of Sociology, 56 (2005), pp. 6580Google Scholar
McCulloch, Margarey Palmer, Scottish Modernism and Its Contexts 1918–59: Literature, National Identity and Cultural Exchange (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2009)Google Scholar
MacDonald, Catriona M. M., ‘Alba Mater: Scottish University Students, 1889–1945’, in Anderson, Robert, Freeman, Mark and Paterson, Lindsay (eds.), The Edinburgh History of Education in Scotland (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2015), pp. 286303Google Scholar
McEwen, Nicola, Nationalism and the State: Welfare and Identity in Scotland and Quebec (Brussels, Peter Lang, 2006)Google Scholar
McHarg, Aileen, Mullen, Tom, Page, Alan and Walker, Neil (eds.), The Scottish Independence Referendum: Constitutional and Political Implications (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2016)Google Scholar
MacKay, Fiona and Kenny, Meryl, ‘Women’s Political Representation and the SNP: Gendered Paradoxes and Puzzles’, in Hassan, Gerry (ed.), The Modern SNP (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2009), pp. 4254Google Scholar
McLean, Bob, Getting It Together: The History of the Campaign for a Scottish Assembly/Parliament 1980–99 (Edinburgh, Luath Press, 2005)Google Scholar
McLean, Iain, ‘The Rise and Fall of the Scottish National Party’, Political Studies, 18 (1970), pp. 357–72Google Scholar
McLean, Iain, Gallagher, Jim and Lodge, Guy, Choices, Scotland’s: The Referendum and What Happens Afterwards (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2013)Google Scholar
MacPherson, C. B., Democracy in Alberta: Social Credit and the Party System (Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 2013 [1953])Google Scholar
MacQueen, Hector, ‘Legal Nationalism: Lord Cooper, Legal History and Comparative Law’, Edinburgh Law Review, 9 (2005), pp. 395406Google Scholar
MacQueen, Hector, ‘Two Toms and an Ideology for Scots Law: T. B. Smith and Lord Cooper of Culross’, in Reid, Elspeth and Miller, David Carey (eds.), A Mixed Legal System in Transition: T. B. Smith and the Progress of Scots Law (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2005), pp. 4472Google Scholar
MacQueen, Hector, ‘Public Law, Private Law, and National Identity’, in Amhlaigh, Cormac Mac, Michelon, Claudio and Walker, Neil (eds.), After Public Law (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2013), pp. 168–98Google Scholar
Macwhirter, Iain, Disunited Kingdom: How Westminster Won a Referendum But Lost Scotland (Glasgow, Cargo, 2014)Google Scholar
Mansbach, Richard, ‘The SNP: A Revised Political Profile’, Comparative Politics, 5 (1973), pp. 185210Google Scholar
Marr, Andrew, The Battle for Scotland (London, Penguin, 1995)Google Scholar
Mason, Roger, ‘Introduction’ to Buchanan, George, A Dialogue on the Law of Kingship Among the Scots [1579], translated and edited by Smith, Martin and Mason, Roger (Edinburgh, Saltire Society, 2006), pp. 132Google Scholar
Mason, Roger, ‘Beyond the Declaration of Arbroath: Kingship, Counsel and Consent in Late Medieval and Early Modern Scotland’, in Boardman, Steve and Goodare, Julian (eds.), Kings, Lords and Men in Scotland and Britain, 1300–1625 (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2014), pp. 265–82Google Scholar
Matthews, Wade, The New Left, National Identity and the Break-Up of Britain (Chicago, Haymarket, 2014)Google Scholar
Miller, David, On Nationality (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1995)Google Scholar
Miller, William, The End of British Politics? (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1981)Google Scholar
Miller, William, ‘Modified Rapture All Round: The First Elections to the Scottish Parliament’, Government and Opposition, 34 (1999), pp. 299322Google Scholar
Mitchell, James, Strategies for Self-Government (Edinburgh, Polygon, 1996)Google Scholar
Mitchell, James, ‘Varieties of Independence’, in Hassan, Gerry and Mitchell, James (eds.), After Independence (Edinburgh, Luath Press, 2013), pp. 4554Google Scholar
Mitchell, James, The Scottish Question (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2014)Google Scholar
Mitchell, James, ‘Alex Salmond (Act II)’, in Mitchell, James and Hassan, Gerry (eds.), Scottish National Party Leaders (London, Biteback, 2016), pp. 325–48Google Scholar
Mitchell, James, Hamilton 1967: The By-Election That Transformed Scotland (Edinburgh, Luath, 2017)Google Scholar
Mitchell, James, ‘The Meaning of Independence’, in Hassan, Gerry and Barrow, Simon (eds.), A Nation Changed? The SNP and Scotland Ten Years on (Edinburgh, Luath Press, 2017), pp. 299304Google Scholar
Mitchell, James and Johns, Rob, Takeover: Explaining the Extraordinary Rise of the SNP (London, Biteback, 2016)Google Scholar
Morton, Graeme, Unionist-Nationalism: Governing Urban Scotland 1830–60 (East Linton, Tuckwell Press, 1999)Google Scholar
Moyn, Samuel, Christian Human Rights (Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015)Google Scholar
Mudge, Stephanie, Leftism Reinvented: Western Parties from Socialism to Neo-Liberalism (Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press, 2018)Google Scholar
Mulhall, Stephen and Swift, Adam, Liberals and Communitarians (Oxford, Wiley-Blackwell, 1996)Google Scholar
Mycock, Andrew, ‘SNP, Identity and Citizenship: Reimagining State and Nation’, National Identities, 14 (2012), pp. 5369Google Scholar
Nehring, Holger, ‘“Out of Apathy”: Genealogies of the British “New Left” in a Transnational Context, 1956–62’, in Klimke, Martin, Pekelder, Jakko and Scharloth, Joachim (eds.), Between Prague Spring and French May: Opposition and Revolt in Europe, 1960–80 (New York, Berghahn Books, 2013), pp. 1531Google Scholar
Nicoll, Laurence, ‘Philosophy, Tradition, Nation’, in Bell, Eleanor and Miller, Gavin (eds.), Scotland in Theory (Edinburgh, Rodopi, 2004), pp. 211–28Google Scholar
Østergaard Neilsen, Jimmi and Ward, Stuart, ‘“Cramped and Restricted at Home?” Scottish Separatism at Empire’s End’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 25 (2015), pp. 159–85Google Scholar
Østergaard Neilsen, Jimmi and Ward, Stuart, ‘Three Referenda and a By-Election: The Shadow of Empire in Devolutionary Politics’, in MacKenzie, John and Glass, Bryan (eds.), Scotland, Empire and Decolonisation in the Twentieth Century (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2015), pp. 200–22Google Scholar
Paterson, Lindsay, ‘Ane End of Ane Auld Sang: Sovereignty and the Re-Negotiation of the Union’, The Scottish Government Yearbook, 1991, pp. 104–22Google Scholar
Paterson, Lindsay, The Autonomy of Modern Scotland (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 1994)Google Scholar
Paterson, Lindsay, Scottish Education in the Twentieth Century (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2003)Google Scholar
Paterson, Lindsay, ‘Democracy or Intellect: The Scottish Educational Dilemma of the Twentieth Century’, in Anderson, Robert, Freeman, Mark and Paterson, Lindsay (eds.), The Edinburgh History of Education in Scotland (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2015), pp. 226–45Google Scholar
Paterson, Lindsay, ‘George Davie and the Democratic Intellect’, in Graham, Gordon (ed.), Scottish Philosophy in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2015), pp. 236–69Google Scholar
Paterson, Lindsay, ‘Utopian Pragmatism: Scotland’s Choice’, Scottish Affairs, 24 (2015), pp. 2246Google Scholar
Pattie, Charles and Johnston, Ron, ‘Sticking to the Union? Nationalism, Inequality and Political Disaffection and the Geography of Scotland’s 2014 Independence Referendum’, Regional and Federal Studies, 27 (2017), pp. 8396Google Scholar
Pentland, Gordon, ‘Douglas Young’, in Hassan, Gerry and Mitchell, James (eds.), Scottish National Party Leaders (London, Biteback, 2016), pp. 145–64Google Scholar
Petrie, Malcolm, ‘John MacCormick’, in Hassan, Gerry and Mitchell, James (eds.), Scottish National Party Leaders (London, Biteback, 2016), pp. 4363Google Scholar
Petrie, Malcolm, ‘Anti-socialism, Liberalism and Individualism: Rethinking the Realignment of Scottish Politics, 1945–70’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 28 (2018), pp. 197217Google Scholar
Phillips, Jim, The Industrial Politics of Devolution (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2008)Google Scholar
Phillips, Jim, ‘Deindustrialisation and the Moral Economy of the Scottish Coalfields, 1947–91’, International Labor and Working Class History, 84 (2013), pp. 99115Google Scholar
Phillips, Jim, ‘The Closure of Michael Colliery in 1967 and the Politics of Deindustrialisation in Scotland’, Twentieth Century British History, 26 (2015), pp. 551–72Google Scholar
Phillips, Jim, Wright, Valerie and Tomlinson, Jim, ‘Deindustrialisation, the Linwood Car Plant and Scotland’s Political Divergence from England in the 1960s and 1970s’, Twentieth Century British History, 30 (2019), pp. 399423Google Scholar
Pittock, Murray, The Road to Independence? Scotland in the Balance (London, Reaktion, 2013)Google Scholar
Price, Richard, ‘Some Questions about Literary Infrastructure in the 1960s’, in Bell, Eleanor and Gunn, Linda (eds.), The Scottish Sixties: Reading, Rebellion, Revolution? (Amsterdam, Rodopi, 2013), pp. 93114Google Scholar
Purdie, Bob, Hugh MacDiarmid: Black, Green, Red and Tartan (Cardiff, Welsh Academic Press, 2012)Google Scholar
Redhead, Mark, Charles Taylor: Thinking and Living Deep Diversity (Lanham, Rowman & Littlefield, 2002)Google Scholar
Ritchie, Murray, ‘Alex Salmond (Act I)’, in Mitchell, James and Hassan, Gerry (eds.), Scottish National Party Leaders (London, Biteback, 2016), pp. 281–99Google Scholar
Robertson, John, ‘An Elusive Sovereignty: The Course of the Union Debate in Scotland 1698–1707’, in Robertson, John (ed.), A Union for Empire (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1995), pp. 198227Google Scholar
Robinson, Emily, Schofield, Camilla, Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, Florence and Thomlinson, Natalie, ‘Telling Stories about Post-War Britain: Popular Individualism and the “Crisis” of the 1970s’, Twentieth Century British History, 28 (2017), pp. 268304Google Scholar
Rosenfeld, Sophia, Common Sense: A Political History (Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press, 2011)Google Scholar
Saunders, Robert, ‘“An Auction of Fear?” The Scotland in Europe Referendum, 1975’, Renewal, 22 (2014), pp. 8795Google Scholar
Saunders, Robert, Yes to Europe! The 1975 Referendum and Seventies Britain (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2018)Google Scholar
Scothorne, Rory, ‘The “Radical Current”: Nationalism and the Radical Left in Scotland, 1967–79’, H-Nationalism, 25 May 2018, at https://networks.h-net.org/node/3911/discussions/1862513/left-and-nationalism-monthly-series-%E2%80%9C-%E2%80%98radical-current%E2%80%99Google Scholar
Scothorne, Rory, ‘From the Outer Edge’, London Review of Books, vol. 40, no. 23, 6 December 2018, pp. 35–8Google Scholar
Scott, Drew, ‘Neil MacCormick: Public Intellectual’, in Walker, Neil (ed.), MacCormick’s Scotland (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2012), pp. 205–19Google Scholar
Scott, Paul Henderson, Scotland Resurgent (Edinburgh, Saltire Society, 2003)Google Scholar
Simpson, Grant, ‘The Declaration of Arbroath Revitalised’, Scottish Historical Review, 56 (1977), pp. 1133Google Scholar
Sloman, Peter, The Liberal Party and the Economy, 1929–64 (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2015)Google Scholar
Smith, Anthony, Nationalism (2nd ed., Cambridge, Polity, 2010)Google Scholar
Smith, Ken, ‘Salmond Puts the Case for the Economics of Independence’, Herald, 7 August 1993Google Scholar
Somerville, Paula, Through the Maelstrom: A History of the Scottish National Party 1945–67 (Stirling, Scots Independent, 2013)Google Scholar
Stafford, James, ‘The Revenge of Sovereignty: The SNP, the Financial Crisis and UK Constitutional Reform’, SPERI Paper No. 20 (Sheffield, SPERI, March 2015)Google Scholar
Stedman Jones, Gareth, ‘Rethinking Chartism’, in his Languages of Class (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1984), pp. 90178Google Scholar
Stevenson, Randall and Wallace, Gavin (eds.), Scottish Theatre since the Seventies (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 1996)Google Scholar
Stewart, David, The Path to Devolution and Change: A Political History of Scotland under Margaret Thatcher (London, IB Tauris, 2009)Google Scholar
Stewart, Thomas, ‘“A Disguised Liberal Party Vote?” Third Party Voting and the SNP under Gordon Wilson in Dundee in the 1970s and 1980s’, Contemporary British History, 33 (2019), pp. 357–82Google Scholar
Taylor, Alice, The Shape of the State in Medieval Scotland, 1124–1290 (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2016)Google Scholar
Thompson, William, ‘Tom Nairn and the Crisis of the British State’, Contemporary Record, 6 (1992), pp. 306–25Google Scholar
Tomkins, Adam, ‘The Constitutional Law in MacCormick v Lord Advocate’, Juridical Review, 2004, pt 3, pp. 213–24Google Scholar
Tomlinson, Jim, ‘Imagining the Economic Nation: The Scottish Case’, Political Quarterly, 85 (2014), pp. 170–7Google Scholar
Tomlinson, Jim, The Politics of Decline: Understanding Post-War Britain (London, Routledge, 2014)Google Scholar
Tomlinson, Jim, ‘Deindustrialisation Not Decline: A New Meta-Narrative for Post-War British History’, Twentieth Century British History, 27 (2016), pp. 7699Google Scholar
Tomlinson, Jim and Gibbs, Ewan, ‘Planning the New Industrial Nation: Scotland 1931 to 1979’, Contemporary British History, 30 (2016), pp. 584606Google Scholar
Torrance, David, ‘The Journey from the ’79 Group to the Modern SNP’, in Hassan, Gerry (ed.), The Modern SNP (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2009), pp. 162–76Google Scholar
Torrance, David, Salmond: Against the Odds (Edinburgh, Birlinn, 2011)Google Scholar
Vinen, Richard, The Long ’68: Radical Protest and Its Enemies (London, Allen Lane, 2018)Google Scholar
Walker, Neil, ‘Scottish Nationalism for and against the Union State’, in Walker, Neil (ed.), MacCormick’s Scotland (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2012), pp. 163–90Google Scholar
Walker, Neil (ed.), MacCormick’s Scotland (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2012)Google Scholar
Webb, Keith, The Growth of Nationalism in Scotland (Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1978)Google Scholar
Wellings, Ben and Kenny, Michael, ‘Nairn’s England and the Progressive Dilemma: Reappraising Tom Nairn on English Nationalism’, Nations and Nationalism, 25 (2019), pp. 847–65Google Scholar
Whigham, Stuart, ‘Nationalism, Party Political Discourse and Scottish Independence: Comparing Discursive Visions of Scotland’s Constitutional Status’, Nations and Nationalism, 25 (2019), pp. 1212–37Google Scholar
White, Stuart, “‘Revolutionary Liberalism?’ The Philosophy and Politics of Ownership in the Post-War Liberal Party’, British Politics, 4 (2009), pp. 164–87Google Scholar
White, Stuart, ‘A Marquandian Moment? The Civic Republican Political Theory of David Marquand’, in Schattle, Hans and Nuttall, Jeremy (eds.), Making Social Democrats: Citizens, Mindsets, Realities: Essays for David Marquand (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2018), pp. 139–59Google Scholar
Williamson, Philip, Stanley Baldwin (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1999)Google Scholar
Willock, Ian, ‘The Scottish Legal Heritage Revisited’, in Grant, John (ed.), Independence and Devolution: The Legal Implications for Scotland (Edinburgh, W. Green & Sons, 1976), pp. 114Google Scholar
Wilson, Gordon, The SNP: The Turbulent Years 1960–90 (Stirling, Scots Independent, 2009)Google Scholar
Yack, Bernard, Nationalism and the Moral Psychology of Community (Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 2012)Google Scholar
Zimmer, Oliver, ‘Boundary Mechanisms and Symbolic Resources: Towards a Process-Oriented Approach to National Identity’, Nations and Nationalism, 9 (2003), pp. 173–93Google Scholar
Zimmer, Oliver, Nationalism in Europe, 1890–1940 (Basingstoke, Palgrave, 2003)Google Scholar
Campsie, Alexandre, ‘A Social and Intellectual History of British Socialism from New Left to New Times’ (PhD, Cambridge University, 2017)Google Scholar
Scothorne, Rory, ‘Nationalism and the Radical Left in Scotland, 1968–92’ (PhD, Edinburgh University, in progress)Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×