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Being Scottish: a cultural overview
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 June 2016
Abstract
There has been a change in atmosphere in Scotland since the opening of the Scottish Parliament in 1999. This article describes some aspects of the country’s cultural background and the route taken to get there, as well as current trends in the Scottish library world.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright
- Copyright © The Art Libraries Society 2003
References
Bibliography
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References
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5. Of course there are negative connotations of Scottishness too, of which Scots are often too well aware. It was a Scottish author, after all, who invented Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.Google Scholar
6. ‘The myth of the “lad o’ pairts”, or the clever young Scot who is able to rise from lowly origins thanks to an open educational system, has only ever been a half-truth. But it is a myth that has endured not only because it has some basis in fact, but also because it continues to represent an ideal that Scots hold dear and which their leaders are prepared to pursue with more than just noble sentiments.’ Adam Fox ‘Taking the higher road: can the Scottish higher education model solve England’s university funding crisis?’ Education Guardian 21 Nov. 2002 (http://education.guardian.co.uk/universitiesin crisis/story/0,12028,844487,00.html)Google Scholar
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9.
See article elsewhere in this issue of the Art libraries journal.
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11. The SLAINTE website at http://www.slainte.org.uk is the best source for information on Scottish librarianship.Google Scholar
12.
http://www.scran.ac.uk/. See also article elsewhere in this issue of the Art libraries journal.
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http://www.rls.ac.uk/. Dunsire, Gordon and Nicholson, Dennis. ‘Beyond the screens’. Scottish libraries vol. 17 no. 3 2002 gives a useful summary of digital library developments in Scotland.Google Scholar
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15. Task Force report (http://www.scotland.gov.uk/digitalscotland/digital_scotland.pdf); Digital inclusion: connecting Scotland’s people (http://www.scoti and.gov.uk/library3/enterprise/dics.pdf)
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