Item also deposited in University of Edinburgh (Edinburgh Research Explorer) repository, available at: https://www.research.ed.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/accommodation-or-political-identity(b85753d3-9059-40c0-ae2c-8c5bcc9da890).htmlPhonetic variation among Scottish Members of the UK Parliament may be influenced by convergence to Southern English norms (Carr & Brulard 2006) or political identity (e.g., Hall-Lew, Coppock & Starr 2010). Drawing on a year's worth of political speeches (2011- 2012) from ten Scottish Members of the UK Parliament (MPs), we find no acoustic evidence for the adoption of a Southern English low vowel system; rather, we find that vowel height is significantly correlated with political party: Scottish Labour Part...
Scotland has long been a nation within a wider state, but only within the last four decades has a po...
What explains variations in the class-based support for social democratic parties? Demand-size expla...
Voters typically want their elected representatives to have roots in their local area, yet a large n...
Item also deposited in University of Edinburgh (Edinburgh Research Explorer) repository, available a...
This paper investigates the attachment of overt and covert prestige to different varieties of Scotti...
Significant research has been dedicated to the question what roles members of parliament play within...
The portmanteau Brexit was coined in the lead up to the 2016 referendum on the United Kingdom’s memb...
Brexit and the continuing prospect of Scottish independence has provided a unique opportunity to exp...
In the newly published IPPR pamphlet The Dog That Finally Barked: England as an Emerging Political C...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>To discover to what ex...
This article investigates how variation across different levels of linguistic structure indexes ideo...
In this article I consider why the expected English backlash to the asymmetric UK devolution settlem...
We examine “Liverpool lenition” in the speech of Len McCluskey, a speaker of “Scouse”. Scouse is a v...
The objective of my thesis was to explain the specifity of the Scottish electoral behaviour in the c...
Where censuses are concerned, politics and ideology are pervasive. The 2011 census in Scotland (a se...
Scotland has long been a nation within a wider state, but only within the last four decades has a po...
What explains variations in the class-based support for social democratic parties? Demand-size expla...
Voters typically want their elected representatives to have roots in their local area, yet a large n...
Item also deposited in University of Edinburgh (Edinburgh Research Explorer) repository, available a...
This paper investigates the attachment of overt and covert prestige to different varieties of Scotti...
Significant research has been dedicated to the question what roles members of parliament play within...
The portmanteau Brexit was coined in the lead up to the 2016 referendum on the United Kingdom’s memb...
Brexit and the continuing prospect of Scottish independence has provided a unique opportunity to exp...
In the newly published IPPR pamphlet The Dog That Finally Barked: England as an Emerging Political C...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>To discover to what ex...
This article investigates how variation across different levels of linguistic structure indexes ideo...
In this article I consider why the expected English backlash to the asymmetric UK devolution settlem...
We examine “Liverpool lenition” in the speech of Len McCluskey, a speaker of “Scouse”. Scouse is a v...
The objective of my thesis was to explain the specifity of the Scottish electoral behaviour in the c...
Where censuses are concerned, politics and ideology are pervasive. The 2011 census in Scotland (a se...
Scotland has long been a nation within a wider state, but only within the last four decades has a po...
What explains variations in the class-based support for social democratic parties? Demand-size expla...
Voters typically want their elected representatives to have roots in their local area, yet a large n...