The Scottish National Party: Transition to Power
The Scottish National Party: Transition to Power
This book is a study of the Scottish National Party (SNP) immediately after it came to power in May 2007, based on a survey of the entire membership and elite interviews with over eighty senior party figures. Discussion is located within the appropriate literatures and comparisons drawn with other British parties. The image of the SNP as a youthful party, with a decentralized social movement-type organization, is challenged. The party is much older and much more male than had previously been thought and appears more like other conventional parties than its past image suggested. Its increased membership in recent years hold few clues as to how to re-engage youth as even these recent joiners are predominantly older people, often former members returning to the party. The study questions the value of the civic-ethnic dichotomy in understanding nationalism with SNP members, acknowledging different ways - ethnic and civic - of defining who belongs to the Scottish nation. The picture that emerges is of a reasonably coherent left of centre party that accepts the pragmatism of its leadership. While independence remains the key motivation for joining and being active, a sizeable minority see the party as a means of furthering Scottish interests.
Ideology, Nationalism, Political parties, Scottish politics
Mitchell, James
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Bennie, Lynn
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Johns, Rob
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1 November 2011
Mitchell, James
0c4ca906-da8c-4d12-b288-0b72a194fc2e
Bennie, Lynn
64fd5a12-457e-4239-b0e3-448d3f329a48
Johns, Rob
02861bc9-b704-49b1-bbc7-cf1c1e9b7a35
Mitchell, James, Bennie, Lynn and Johns, Rob
(2011)
The Scottish National Party: Transition to Power
,
Oxford University Press, 208pp.
Abstract
This book is a study of the Scottish National Party (SNP) immediately after it came to power in May 2007, based on a survey of the entire membership and elite interviews with over eighty senior party figures. Discussion is located within the appropriate literatures and comparisons drawn with other British parties. The image of the SNP as a youthful party, with a decentralized social movement-type organization, is challenged. The party is much older and much more male than had previously been thought and appears more like other conventional parties than its past image suggested. Its increased membership in recent years hold few clues as to how to re-engage youth as even these recent joiners are predominantly older people, often former members returning to the party. The study questions the value of the civic-ethnic dichotomy in understanding nationalism with SNP members, acknowledging different ways - ethnic and civic - of defining who belongs to the Scottish nation. The picture that emerges is of a reasonably coherent left of centre party that accepts the pragmatism of its leadership. While independence remains the key motivation for joining and being active, a sizeable minority see the party as a means of furthering Scottish interests.
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Published date: 1 November 2011
Keywords:
Ideology, Nationalism, Political parties, Scottish politics
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Local EPrints ID: 489787
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489787
PURE UUID: 98851545-d57e-414d-b0d5-2274a8d8b87d
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Date deposited: 02 May 2024 16:36
Last modified: 13 Sep 2024 02:11
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Author:
James Mitchell
Author:
Lynn Bennie
Author:
Rob Johns
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