The Importance of the Discovery of North Sea Oil in the Development of the SNP and the Scottish Nationalism
الكلمات المفتاحية:
importance، discovery، North Sea Oil، Development، SNP، Scottish Nationalismالملخص
To date, researches are made on the establishment of the Scottish Parliament in 1999. This development in the Scottish nationalist movement had its roots in the post-Second World War especially with the flourish of the Scottish National Party in the 1960s. This study seeks to show to what extent the discovery of North Sea Oil was important in the development of the SNP as well as the Scottish nationalist movement. It also sheds light on the efforts made by the SNP to reach devolution and aims to explain how this discovery represented a turning point in the electoral performance of the party. The latter started its electoral campaign in the beginning of the 1970s.
التنزيلات
المراجع
Finaly, Richard J. Modern Scotland 1914-2000. London: Profile Book, 2004. p 325.
Richard J Finlay. p 336.
Menzies, Gordon ed. In Search of Scotland. Edinburgh: Polygon, 2001. p 221.
Richard J Finlay. p 329.
Harvie, Christopher. Scotland and Nationalism: Scottish Society and Politics 1707 to the
Present. 4th ed. London: Taylor and Francis Routledge, 2004. p 131.
Walker, Graham. “Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Devolution, 1945-1979.” The Journal of
British Studies 49.1 (2010): 117-42. http://www.jstor.org/stable/644536. p 117.
Lynch, Peter. SNP: The History of the Scottish National Party. Cardiff: Welsh Academic
Press, 2002. p 123.
Meadows, Martin. “Constitutional Crisis in the United Kingdom: Scotland and Devolution
Controversy.” The Review of Politics 39.1 (1977): 41-59.
http://www.jstor.org/stable/1406577. p 48.
Cameron, Evan A. Impaled Upon a Thistle: Scotland Since 1880. Edinburgh: Edinburgh UP,
p 291.
Evan A Cameron. p 294.
Christopher Harvie. p 122.
Peter Lynch. p 125.
Peter Lynch. p 123.
Evan A Cameron. p 292.
Hassan, Gerry ed. The Modern SNP: From Protest to Power. Edinburgh: Edinburgh UP,
p 35.
Peter Lynch. p 128.
Evan A Cameron. p 291.
Peter Lynch. p 130.
Martin Meadows. p 45.
Morgan, Kenneth O. ed. The Oxford History of Britain. New York: Oxford UP, 1989. p 56.