Scottish higher education and the Scottish parliament: the consequences of mistaken national identity
- 1 October 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in European Review
- Vol. 6 (4) , 459-474
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s1062798700003616
Abstract
The creation of a Scottish parliament in 1999 will crystallize a cultural crisis for Scottish higher education. Scottish universities retained their autonomy after the 18th-century union between Scotland and England because the union was about high politics rather than the affairs of civil society and culture. Unlike in England, the universities developed in close relationship with Scottish agencies of the state during the 19th century, and these agencies also built up a system of non-university higher education colleges. In the 20th century, the universities (and later some of the colleges) sought to detach themselves from Scottish culture and politics, favouring instead a common British academic network. So the new constitutional settlement faces Scottish higher education institutions with an enforced allegiance to the Scottish nation that will sharply disrupt their 80-year interlude as outposts of the British polity.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Scottish Parliament and Scottish Civil Society: Which Side will Education be on?The Political Quarterly, 1998
- Growing Pains: The Dearing Report from a European PerspectiveHigher Education Quarterly, 1998
- Higher Education Participation in Northern IrelandHigher Education Quarterly, 1997
- Higher Education in Wales: The (Re‐)emergence of a National System?Higher Education Quarterly, 1997
- The changing idea of university autonomyStudies in Higher Education, 1995
- University Autonomy: The ‘80s and AfterHigher Education Quarterly, 1994
- Regionalism among Entrants to Higher Education from Scottish SchoolsOxford Review of Education, 1993
- Taking networks seriously: Education policy in BritainEuropean Journal of Political Research, 1992
- Academic freedom, autonomy and accountability in British universitiesStudies in Higher Education, 1990
- The Changing Boundary between the State and Higher EducationEuropean Journal of Education, 1982