
On 18 September 2014, Scotland Held A Referendum On The Question: Should Scotland Be An Independent Country? This Is A Most Unusual Event In Modern Democracies And Engaged The Political Class, Civil Society, And The General Public To An Unprecedented Degree, Leading To An 85 Per Cent Turnout In The Final Vote. This Was An Occasion To Debate Not Just The Narrow Constitutional Issue But The Future Of The Nation, Including The Economy, Social Welfare, Defence And Security, And Scotland's Place In Europe And The World. Debating Scotland Comes From A Team Of Researchers Who Observed The Debates From Close-up And Engaged With Both Sides, With The Media And With The Public In Analyzing The Issues, While Remaining Neutral On The Independence Question. The Book Examines The Main Issues At Stake, How They Were Presented, And How They Evolved Over The Course Of The Campaign. The Editors And Contributing Authors Explore The Ways Both Independence And Union Were Framed, The Economic Issues, The Currency, Welfare, Defence And Security, The European Union, And How The Example Of Small Independent States Was Used. The Volume Concludes With An Analysis Of Voter Responses, Based Upon Original Survey Research, Which Demonstrates How Perceptions Of Risk And Uncertainty On The Main Issues Played A Key Role In The Outcome.
This book investigates the political, social, and economic arguments that defined the 2014 Scottish independence referendum. Michael Keating and a team of researchers utilize their proximity to the campaign to analyze how both the 'Yes' and 'No' camps framed their arguments. The work provides a systematic examination of how these competing narratives influenced public perception and ultimately shaped the final electoral outcome.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this volume as a comprehensive academic record of the 2014 referendum campaign. Readers frequently note the balanced, analytical approach taken by the contributors in dissecting complex constitutional issues.
Page Count:
248
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192507044
ISBN-13:
9780192507044
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