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Original Articles

‘One Scotland Many Cultures’

Knowledge, acknowledgement and invisibility, Aiden McGeady, and the sports media in a multicultural society

Pages 189-205 | Published online: 11 Feb 2011
 

Notes

 2. Finn and Dimeo, ‘Scottish Racism, Scottish Identities’, 125.

 3. Material relating to the Scottish Executive's ‘One Scotland Many Cultures’ website campaign is accessible on http://www.onescotland.com/onescotland/. This quote is from a related site http://www.youngscot.org/onescotland/ (accessed 18 January 2005). INTERNET.

 4. http://www.scotland.gov.uk/News/Releases/2004/02/5072 (accessed 14 July 2005). INTERNET.

 5. ‘One Scotland Many Cultures’ website. ‘Racism in Scotland’ section, 1.

 6. Daily Record, ‘Young Scot: One Scotland, Many Cultures; Every One of Us Needs to Do Our Bit to Tackle Racism and Prejudice’, 8 April 2004, p. 4.

 7. ‘One Scotland Many Cultures’ website. ‘Racism and Colonialism’ section, 1.

 8. ‘One Scotland Many Cultures’ website. ‘Racism and Colonialism’ section, 1.

 9. ‘One Scotland Many Cultures’ website. ‘Racism: Ethnicity Data’ section, 1.

10. ‘One Scotland Many Cultures’ website. ‘Racism: Ethnicity Data’ section, 1.

11. ‘One Scotland Many Cultures’ website. ‘History of Migration’ section, 1.

12. ‘One Scotland Many Cultures’ website. ‘Racism: Ethnicity Data’ section, 1.

14. ‘Out of the Ghetto? The Catholic Community in Modern Scotland’, University of Stirling, 24 January 1997.

15. At a public debate at the University of Aberdeen on 8 February 2005, Professors Tom Devine and Steve Bruce discussed sectarianism in Scotland. Bruce denied its existence and its seriousness, maintaining a line of polemical consistency over a twenty-year period of academic and popular publications. Devine accepted that it was a problem often inaccurately described and represented by the media as well as being a more complex issue than usually acknowledged. However, he also stressed that it was a serious issue in Scotland, as evidenced by a long list of government-backed bodies, public figures, politicians, the police force, newspapers, social and other organisations and prominent individuals who agree and who, he reminded the audience, agreed with him. Other academics such as Graham Walker offer polemical support to the arguments of Bruce et al. For example, see the review of Bruce's work in Fortnight, November 2004, ‘The Myth of Scottish Sectarianism’. For Bruce's aligning of the issue of sectarianism with football hooliganism and other west of Scotland male alcohol-induced violence see ‘Why Scottish Catholics Should Not Live in Fear of Religious Abuse’, Scottish Catholic Observer, 10 December 2004.

18. Miles and Muirhead, ‘Racism in Scotland’; Hickman, ‘Reconstructing Deconstructing “Race”’; CitationMac an Ghaill, ‘British Critical Theorists’.

20. Mac an Ghaill, ‘British Critical Theorists’, 181.

24. See Mac an Ghaill, Contemporary Racisms and Ethnicities, 184.

25. White on black racist crime in Scotland has been increasing in the new millennium and this is partly put down to the rise in ‘reported’ instances of these crimes. In addition, a new ‘black literature’ has emerged in recent years articulating the racism that non-white people face in Scotland and Britain more generally.

27. Mac an Ghaill, ‘British Critical Theorists’, 181.

28. This project was financed by the government-sponsored Economic and Social Research Council in 2001–02 and essentially looked at questions and issues of identity, focusing on people born in Britain of at least one Irish-born parent or grandparent. Interviewees have been given pseudonyms for the purpose of reporting the findings. The work was carried out by Drs J. Bradley and S. Morgan, and Professors M. Hickman and B. Walter. For further references see http://www.anglia.ac.uk/geography/progress/irish2/.

29. J. Traynor, Herald, Sport, 22 August 1994, p. 9.

30. Daily Star, Letters, 26 May 2003, p. 20.

31. See S. Fisher, Sunday Herald, Sport, 18 May 2003, p. 7.

32. Scotland on Sunday, Letters, 24 March 2002, p. 20.

33. A. Massie, Scotland on Sunday, Week in Review, 29 July 2001, p. 9.

34. E. Grahame, Herald, Sport, 8 April 2002, p. 1.

35. B. Leckie, Sun, 8 April 2002, p. 50.

36. G. McNee, News of the World, 6 May 2001, p. 15; G. McNee, News of the World, 7 October 2001, p. 69.

37. Leader/Editorial, Scotsman, 23 August 2002, p. 15.

39. BBC Radio Scotland, 25 April 2004.

40. S. Cosgrove, Daily Record, 30 December 2004, p. 67.

41. Daily Record, 31 December 2004, p. 79.

42. J. McKie, Daily Record, 1 January 2005, p. 11.

43. Daily Record, 2 May 2004, pp. 72–73.

44. Follow Follow, Glasgow Rangers supporter website fanzine, Available from http://www.followfollow.com/ (accessed 26 April 2005). INTERNET.

45. A. Smith, Scotland on Sunday, 2 May 2004, p. 7.

46. R. Travers, Scotland on Sunday, 9 November 1997, p. 13.

47. J. Traynor, Daily Record, 23 May 2005, p. 5, also contributes to the significant media and popular criticism of Catholic Schools in Scotland.

48. J. Traynor, Daily Record, 2 May 2005, p. 24.

49. D. Leggat, People, 26 December 2004, p. 10.

50. D. Leggat, People, 8 May 2005, p. 17.

51. J. MacLeod, Herald, 18 February 2003, p. 12.

52. Herald, 12 July 2005, p. 1.

53. Herald, 5 August 2005, p. 25, and 27 May 2005, p. 19.

54. Herald, 2 May 2005, p. 1.

55. Herald, Sport, 27 August 2005, p. 10.

56. Sunday Mail, 28 November 1999, p. 34.

57. Herald, 8 September 1997, p. 29.

59. Address by Uachtaran na hEireann Mary Robinson to Joint sitting of the Houses of the Oireachtas.

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