Land Reform in Scotland
History, Law and Policy
Herausgeber: Combe, Malcolm; Tindley, Annie; Glass, Jayne
Land Reform in Scotland
History, Law and Policy
Herausgeber: Combe, Malcolm; Tindley, Annie; Glass, Jayne
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A stimulating review of contemporary land reform in Scotland
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A stimulating review of contemporary land reform in Scotland
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Scotland's Land
- Verlag: Edinburgh University Press
- Seitenzahl: 384
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Februar 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 155mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 680g
- ISBN-13: 9781474446853
- ISBN-10: 147444685X
- Artikelnr.: 58356692
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Scotland's Land
- Verlag: Edinburgh University Press
- Seitenzahl: 384
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Februar 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 155mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 680g
- ISBN-13: 9781474446853
- ISBN-10: 147444685X
- Artikelnr.: 58356692
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Malcolm M. Combe is a Senior Lecturer in law at the University of Strathclyde and non-practising solicitor Jayne Glass is a Research Fellow in the Rural Policy Centre at Scotland's Rural College (SRUC) and Honorary Lecturer at the University of Edinburgh. She was previously a Researcher at the Centre for Mountain Studies at Perth College UHI (University of the Highlands and Islands). She has undertaken a range of theoretical and applied research and consultancy projects related to land reform and land ownership in Scotland. She has co-edited and contributed to Land Reform in Scotland: History, Law and Policy (Edinburgh University Press, 2020) and Lairds, Land and Sustainability: Scottish Perspectives on Upland Management (Edinburgh University Press, 2013). Annie Tindley is Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, with expertise in modern Scottish, British and imperial history, focussing on the Scottish Highlands, landed elites and empire. She is degree programme leader on UG and PG History courses and the first director of the Centre for Scotland's Land Futures. She is the author of The Sutherland Estate, 1850-1920 (Edinburgh University Press, 2010), and Lachlan Grant of Ballachulish, 1871-1945 (co-edited with Ewen A. Cameron, Birlinn, 2015).
Acknowledgements; List of Contributors Introduction Malcolm M. Combe, Jayne
Glass and Annie Tindley
Part I: History Chapter 1: Land, labour and capital: external influences
and internal responses in early modern Scotland. Allan Macinnes Chapter 2:
Agricultural enlightenment, landownership and Scotland's culture of
improvement, 1700-1820. Brian Bonnyman Chapter 3: The impact of agrarian
radicalism on land reform in Scotland and Ireland, 1879-1903. Brian Casey
Chapter 4: 'The usual agencies of civilisation:' conceptions of
landownership and reform in the comparative context in the long nineteenth
century. Annie Tindley Chapter 5: Still on the agenda? The strange survival
of the Scottish land question, 1880 to 1999. Ewen A. Cameron Part II: Law
Chapter 6: History, law and land through the lens of sasine. Andrew R. C.
Simpson Chapter 7: Legislating for community land rights. Malcom M. Combe
Chapter 8: Towards sustainable community ownership: a comparative
assessment of Scotland's new compulsory community right to buy. John A.
Lovett Chapter 9: Property rights and human rights in Scottish land reform.
Frankie McCarthy Chapter 10: The evolution of sustainable development in
Scotland - a case study of community right to buy regimes, 2003 to 2018.
Andrea Ross Chapter 11: Scottish residential tenancies. Douglas Bain
Chapter 12: Crofting law. Eilidh I. M. MacLellan Chapter 13: Agricultural
tenancy legislation and public policy considerations in Scotland. Hamish
Lean Part III: Policy Chapter 14: Planning and rights: are there lessons
for town planning we can borrow from land reform? Robert G. Reid Chapter
15: Crofting policy and legislation: an undemocratic and illegitimate
structure of domination? Iain MacKinnon Chapter 16: Does size really
matter? Sustainable development outcomes from different scales of land
ownership. Jayne Glass, Steven Thomson and Rob Mc Morran Chapter 17:
Agricultural models in Scotland and Norway - a comparison. Annie McKee,
Heidi Vinge, Hilde Bjørkhaug and Reidar Almås
Index
Glass and Annie Tindley
Part I: History Chapter 1: Land, labour and capital: external influences
and internal responses in early modern Scotland. Allan Macinnes Chapter 2:
Agricultural enlightenment, landownership and Scotland's culture of
improvement, 1700-1820. Brian Bonnyman Chapter 3: The impact of agrarian
radicalism on land reform in Scotland and Ireland, 1879-1903. Brian Casey
Chapter 4: 'The usual agencies of civilisation:' conceptions of
landownership and reform in the comparative context in the long nineteenth
century. Annie Tindley Chapter 5: Still on the agenda? The strange survival
of the Scottish land question, 1880 to 1999. Ewen A. Cameron Part II: Law
Chapter 6: History, law and land through the lens of sasine. Andrew R. C.
Simpson Chapter 7: Legislating for community land rights. Malcom M. Combe
Chapter 8: Towards sustainable community ownership: a comparative
assessment of Scotland's new compulsory community right to buy. John A.
Lovett Chapter 9: Property rights and human rights in Scottish land reform.
Frankie McCarthy Chapter 10: The evolution of sustainable development in
Scotland - a case study of community right to buy regimes, 2003 to 2018.
Andrea Ross Chapter 11: Scottish residential tenancies. Douglas Bain
Chapter 12: Crofting law. Eilidh I. M. MacLellan Chapter 13: Agricultural
tenancy legislation and public policy considerations in Scotland. Hamish
Lean Part III: Policy Chapter 14: Planning and rights: are there lessons
for town planning we can borrow from land reform? Robert G. Reid Chapter
15: Crofting policy and legislation: an undemocratic and illegitimate
structure of domination? Iain MacKinnon Chapter 16: Does size really
matter? Sustainable development outcomes from different scales of land
ownership. Jayne Glass, Steven Thomson and Rob Mc Morran Chapter 17:
Agricultural models in Scotland and Norway - a comparison. Annie McKee,
Heidi Vinge, Hilde Bjørkhaug and Reidar Almås
Index
Acknowledgements; List of Contributors Introduction Malcolm M. Combe, Jayne
Glass and Annie Tindley
Part I: History Chapter 1: Land, labour and capital: external influences
and internal responses in early modern Scotland. Allan Macinnes Chapter 2:
Agricultural enlightenment, landownership and Scotland's culture of
improvement, 1700-1820. Brian Bonnyman Chapter 3: The impact of agrarian
radicalism on land reform in Scotland and Ireland, 1879-1903. Brian Casey
Chapter 4: 'The usual agencies of civilisation:' conceptions of
landownership and reform in the comparative context in the long nineteenth
century. Annie Tindley Chapter 5: Still on the agenda? The strange survival
of the Scottish land question, 1880 to 1999. Ewen A. Cameron Part II: Law
Chapter 6: History, law and land through the lens of sasine. Andrew R. C.
Simpson Chapter 7: Legislating for community land rights. Malcom M. Combe
Chapter 8: Towards sustainable community ownership: a comparative
assessment of Scotland's new compulsory community right to buy. John A.
Lovett Chapter 9: Property rights and human rights in Scottish land reform.
Frankie McCarthy Chapter 10: The evolution of sustainable development in
Scotland - a case study of community right to buy regimes, 2003 to 2018.
Andrea Ross Chapter 11: Scottish residential tenancies. Douglas Bain
Chapter 12: Crofting law. Eilidh I. M. MacLellan Chapter 13: Agricultural
tenancy legislation and public policy considerations in Scotland. Hamish
Lean Part III: Policy Chapter 14: Planning and rights: are there lessons
for town planning we can borrow from land reform? Robert G. Reid Chapter
15: Crofting policy and legislation: an undemocratic and illegitimate
structure of domination? Iain MacKinnon Chapter 16: Does size really
matter? Sustainable development outcomes from different scales of land
ownership. Jayne Glass, Steven Thomson and Rob Mc Morran Chapter 17:
Agricultural models in Scotland and Norway - a comparison. Annie McKee,
Heidi Vinge, Hilde Bjørkhaug and Reidar Almås
Index
Glass and Annie Tindley
Part I: History Chapter 1: Land, labour and capital: external influences
and internal responses in early modern Scotland. Allan Macinnes Chapter 2:
Agricultural enlightenment, landownership and Scotland's culture of
improvement, 1700-1820. Brian Bonnyman Chapter 3: The impact of agrarian
radicalism on land reform in Scotland and Ireland, 1879-1903. Brian Casey
Chapter 4: 'The usual agencies of civilisation:' conceptions of
landownership and reform in the comparative context in the long nineteenth
century. Annie Tindley Chapter 5: Still on the agenda? The strange survival
of the Scottish land question, 1880 to 1999. Ewen A. Cameron Part II: Law
Chapter 6: History, law and land through the lens of sasine. Andrew R. C.
Simpson Chapter 7: Legislating for community land rights. Malcom M. Combe
Chapter 8: Towards sustainable community ownership: a comparative
assessment of Scotland's new compulsory community right to buy. John A.
Lovett Chapter 9: Property rights and human rights in Scottish land reform.
Frankie McCarthy Chapter 10: The evolution of sustainable development in
Scotland - a case study of community right to buy regimes, 2003 to 2018.
Andrea Ross Chapter 11: Scottish residential tenancies. Douglas Bain
Chapter 12: Crofting law. Eilidh I. M. MacLellan Chapter 13: Agricultural
tenancy legislation and public policy considerations in Scotland. Hamish
Lean Part III: Policy Chapter 14: Planning and rights: are there lessons
for town planning we can borrow from land reform? Robert G. Reid Chapter
15: Crofting policy and legislation: an undemocratic and illegitimate
structure of domination? Iain MacKinnon Chapter 16: Does size really
matter? Sustainable development outcomes from different scales of land
ownership. Jayne Glass, Steven Thomson and Rob Mc Morran Chapter 17:
Agricultural models in Scotland and Norway - a comparison. Annie McKee,
Heidi Vinge, Hilde Bjørkhaug and Reidar Almås
Index