Benchmarking Scotland, Catalonia and the Basque Country from the Devolution, Independence and Social Innovation perspective: City-Regional Small Nations Beyond Nation-States

  1. Igor Calzada 1
  2. Tassilo Herrschel
  1. 1 University of Oxford
    info

    University of Oxford

    Oxford, Reino Unido

    ROR https://ror.org/052gg0110

Actes de conférence:
UACES 45th (The Academic Association for Contemporary European Studies) on 9th September 2015 in Bilbao

Année de publication: 2015

Type: Communication dans un congrès

DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.1.2531.0321 GOOGLE SCHOLAR

Résumé

The year 2014 was remarkable for the European Union with regards to how city-regional 'small nations' (Keating, 2014) engaged in democratic experimentation on the right to decide their future beyond their referential nation-states. Key examples include Scotland's and Catalonia's pursuits of independence from the United Kingdom and Spain, respectively. A similar situation occurred in the Basque Country as a consequence of the region increasingly overcoming the political violence that dominated the previous era. There, a democratic debateregarding devolution, constitutional change, independence, and new political relationship with nation-state Spain has arisen (Calzada & Bildarratz, 2015). Regardless the political outcomes, consequences, and meanings in the three aforementioned small nations, the differences in each case's political culture and history are noteworthy. Even more notable are their different means of accommodating a new strategic city-regional governance pathway (Herrschel, 2014) through implicit social innovation processes. Social innovation processes (Moulaert, 2013)depict the way in which stakeholders in a given city-regional small nation -such as political parties, social movements, corporate powers, and media, among others- are led in one direction or another as a whole. To what extent is the starting point of the devolution for each city-regional small nation similar according to its governance, history, and policies? What are the potential political scenarios for each city-regional small nation as a result of the de/recentralisation attitude of its referential nation-states? What are the most relevant strategic social innovationprocesses occurring in each case? This paper aims to benchmark how the Basque Country, Catalonia and Scotland are strategically moving forward beyond their referential nation-states in a diverse way by formulating devolution and even independence in unique terms, as a consequence of the dynamics between stakeholders in each location. This paper is part of a broader research project entitled 'Benchmarking Future City- Regions.