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