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Full Description
Scotland's Populations is a coherent and comprehensive description and analysis of the most recent 170 years of Scottish population history. With its coverage of both national and local themes, set in the context of changes in Scottish economy and society, this study is an essential and definitive source for anyone teaching or writing on modern Scottish history, sociology, or geography. Michael Anderson explores subjects such as population growth and decline, rural settlement and depopulation, and migration and emigration. It sets current and recent population changes in their long-term context, exploring how the legacies of past demographic change have combined with a history of weak industrial investment, employment insecurity, deprivation, and poor living conditions to produce the population profiles and changes of Scotland today. While focussing on Scottish data, Anderson engages in a rigorous treatment of comparisons of Scotland with its neighbours in the British Isles and elsewhere in Europe, which ensures that this is more than a one-country study.
Contents
Part 1. Questions and contexts
1: Scotland's population: not just a history of crises
2: The broad patterns of population change
3: Physical, social, and economic contexts
Part 2. The multiple Scotlands
4: Multiple Scotlands: sub-regional patterns of population change
5: Multiple Scotlands: the nature and sources of sub-regional change
6: Islands
7: The major urban centres
Part 3. Migration and the components and structures of population change
8: The components of population change
9: Patterns of migration
10: Changing age and sex structures and their consequences
Part 4. Fertility and nuptiality
11: Marriage and nuptiality
12: Fertility: national and regional trends
13: The interactions between fertility and nuptiality
14: The first Scottish fertility decline
15: Explaining fertility changes since the 1930s
Part 5. Mortality
16: Scottish national mortality and its wider context
17: Causes of death
18: Spatial variations in mortality and its causes
19: Social and economic differences in mortality
Part 6. Conclusion
20: How and why was Scotland different and what may happen next?



