Skip to content
  • Cultural Studies
    • French Studies
    • Gender Studies
    • Irish Studies
    • Film and TV
    • Theatre and Dance
    • Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies
  • History
    • British History
    • Classics and Ancient History
    • Cultural History
    • Natural History
    • Religious History
    • Scottish History
    • World History
  • Language and Literature
    • Modernism
    • Literary Theory
    • Pre 19th Century Literary Studies
    • Post 19th Century Literary Studies
    • Scottish Literature
    • Atlantic Literature
    • Linguistics
  • Law
    • Comparative Law
    • European Law
    • Islamic Law
    • Roman Law
    • Scots Law
  • Politics, Philosophy and Religion
    • Religion
    • Philosophy
    • Politics
    • Political Philosophy
    • Scottish Politics
    • Film Philosophy
  • Publishing
  • About Us
  • Journals
  • Books
  • SUBSCRIBE TO OUR BLOG
Edinburgh University Press Blog
No results
  • Cultural Studies
    • French Studies
    • Gender Studies
    • Irish Studies
    • Film and TV
    • Theatre and Dance
    • Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies
  • History
    • British History
    • Classics and Ancient History
    • Cultural History
    • Natural History
    • Religious History
    • Scottish History
    • World History
  • Language and Literature
    • Modernism
    • Literary Theory
    • Pre 19th Century Literary Studies
    • Post 19th Century Literary Studies
    • Scottish Literature
    • Atlantic Literature
    • Linguistics
  • Law
    • Comparative Law
    • European Law
    • Islamic Law
    • Roman Law
    • Scots Law
  • Politics, Philosophy and Religion
    • Religion
    • Philosophy
    • Politics
    • Political Philosophy
    • Scottish Politics
    • Film Philosophy
  • Publishing
Edinburgh University Press Blog

Guest Blog Post – ‘Centralisation has its draw backs as well as its advantages’.

The Surrounding Burghs’ Resistance to Glasgow’s Municipal Expansion, c. 1869–1912 By the mid-nineteenth century Scotland’s industrial revolution had resulted in exponential population growth in established towns and cities, as well as the transformation of erstwhile villages into de facto towns.…

  • eupjournalsblog
  • March 25, 2015

Popular posts

June 2, 2026

Sudden Changes in Global Order — From Ancient to Early Modern Iran and Beyond

June 4, 2026

How did the revenue men once invest in slavery?

June 1, 2026

Structural Bias, Education Reform, and Victorian Women’s Poetry

May 25, 2026

Henry Somers-Hall interviewed by Brent Adkins: Reading A Thousand Plateaus

May 19, 2026

From Multiple Possible Worlds to Fission-Fusion Experience

Archives

Subscribe to blog via email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Copyright © 2026 - Edinburgh University Press | All Right Reserved. | Privacy Policy