Article
Details
Citation
Smyth J & McKinlay A (2011) Whigs, Tories and Scottish Legal Reform, c. 1785-1832. Crime, History and Societies, 15 (1), pp. 111-32. https://doi.org/10.4000/chs.1246
Abstract
In early nineteenth-century Scotland the debate over political reform occurred alongside a shadow debate over legal reform. On the one side the young Whigs of the Edinburgh Review argued for the adoption of English legal practice, particularly in civil law, as the means to modernise and civilise Scotland. On the other side stood the Tory jurists who responded by defending Scotland's more humane criminal law. Unlike in England, there was no need to repeal the numerous statutes detailing the death penalty, since Scotland had long been used to judge-made law. These debates reveal rival notions not just of legal procedure but also of Scottish identity. Both sides however, were constrained by their own agendas; the Whigs had little option but to ignore England's ‘bloody code', while the Tories could not push their defence of Scots Law as far as questioning the value of the Union of 1707.
Journal
Crime, History and Societies: Volume 15, Issue 1
Status | Published |
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Publication date | 31/12/2011 |
URL | |
Publisher | Droz |
ISSN | 1422-0857 |