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Function, place and the crofting communities of the future Dr Calum Macleod UHI Centre for Remote and Rural Studies Dr Nicole Busby Dr Nicole Busby School.

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Presentation on theme: "Function, place and the crofting communities of the future Dr Calum Macleod UHI Centre for Remote and Rural Studies Dr Nicole Busby Dr Nicole Busby School."— Presentation transcript:

1 Function, place and the crofting communities of the future Dr Calum Macleod UHI Centre for Remote and Rural Studies Dr Nicole Busby Dr Nicole Busby School of Law University of Stirling

2 Introduction  “Communitarianism and Sustainable Crofting Communities”  Scoping study funded by Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland.  Aim - To apply theoretical communitarian principles to an empirical analysis of the development and regulatory enforcement of crofting law.  Themes explored include: definitions within crofting; links between crofting, sustainable development and cultural diversity; the future regulation of crofting.

3 Methodology  Qualitative approach  Semi-structured interviews and focus groups* with representatives of :  Scottish Government*  Crofters Commission (*)  Highlands and Islands Enterprise  Scottish Crofting Foundation*  Western Isles Council  Scottish Natural Heritage  North Harris Trust  21 participants

4 Crofting in context  Crofting is a system of land management which takes place on small units of land (crofts) situated within the designated crofting areas in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland.  Regulated by Crofters Commission

5 Regulatory Framework  The Crofters’ Holdings (Scotland) Act 1886 – security of tenure, fair rents, succession, value of improvements  The Crofting Reform Act 1976 – right to buy for individual crofters.  The Transfer of Crofting Estates (Scotland) Act 1997 – community buyouts of publicly owned land.  The Land Reform (Scotland) Act 2003 – buyouts of privately owned land.  Crofting Reform etc. Act 2007

6  Communitarian ideals v market realities A unique “crofting way of life”? A unique “crofting way of life”? Changing crofting demographics ‘Right to buy’ & land speculation

7 Weak enforcement of legislation Absenteeism Decrofting Neglect

8 Conceptualising Crofting Communities  Function or place? Bryden (2007) Sustainable Rural Communities in Crofting Areas: A Think-Piece for the Crofting Inquiry.

9 A new rural pardigim (OECD, 2006)  Competitiveness driven by local assets and resources  Broadly based rural economies (tourism, ICT etc) - not solely agriculture  Investment rather than subsidy  Involvement of different levels of government and local stakeholders

10 The Committee of Inquiry on Crofting – ’Shucksmith Inquiry’  A vision for the future of crofting ….  Sustaining & enhancing the population  Improving economic vitality  Safeguarding landscape and biodiversity  Sustaining cultural diversity

11 Draft Crofting Reform (Scotland) Bill Draft Crofting Reform (Scotland) Bill  The Government’s proposals…………  Governance  Crofting Register  Support for Croft Housing  Occupancy Requirement  Crofting Regulation

12 Refining the research themes……. Refining the research themes……. Linking functional crofting interests to a wider, more inclusive ‘place- based’ regional development agenda  Recasting ‘identity’ in crofting communities  Role of community buy-outs?  Governance arrangements? More responsive regulation of crofting  Socio-legal perspectives Land management and sustainability  Individual and community assets


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