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Ideological content and institutional frameworks: Unionist identities in Northern Ireland and Scotland
Authors:Christopher Farrington  Graham Walker
Institution:1. Institute of British Irish Studies, School of Politics and International Relations, University College Dublin , Ireland;2. School of Politics, Philosophy and International Studies, Queen's University Belfast , Northern Ireland
Abstract:This article examines the complex interactions between British national identity and the territorial identities of Northern Ireland and Scotland. We argue that the current literature on national identities in Britain misunderstands the nature of British identities in Northern Ireland and Scotland. Indeed, much of this literature wrongly defines Unionists in both of these areas. By examining the content of British national identity, a comparison of Scotland and Northern Ireland reveals that Unionism finds political significance through an ideological project committed to the Union. However, we also have to account for the differences in the Unionist ideology of Scotland and Northern Ireland. We argue that the institutional framework in which these identities and ideologies are exercised explains this variation. Overall, we argue that the debate on nationalism in the United Kingdom has not adequately shown how the integrative functions of British national identity can co-exist with the separatist nature of territorial national identity.
Keywords:Unionism  devolution  British identity  Scotland  Northern Ireland
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