S. Karly Kehoe is Professor of History and Canada Research Chair in Atlantic Canada Communities at Saint Mary's University in Nova Scotia. Prior to coming to Saint Mary's, she lived and worked in Scotland. She is a fellow of the Royal Historical Society, a member of the Global Young Academy and the Royal Society of Canada's College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists, and an alumna of the Royal Society of Edinburgh's Young Academy of Scotland. Her work concentrates on Scottish and Irish Catholic settlement and colonisation in the north Atlantic, but she is also interested in sustainable development and rural change in Nova Scotia and the Scottish Highlands. INHERIT: the Institute for Heritage & Sustainable Human Development. Annie Tindley is Professor of British and Irish Rural History at Newcastle University and Head of the School of History, Classics & Archaeology. Her work interrogates land issues in the modern period including ownership, management and reform. In 2015 she established and became the first director of the Centre for Scotland's Land Futures, an inter-institutional and interdisciplinary research centre, and is the series editor for Scotland's Land, an interdisciplinary book series published by Edinburgh University Press. She is the author of The Sutherland Estate, 1850-1920 (Edinburgh University Press, 2010), and Lachlan Grant of Ballachulish, 1871-1945 (co-edited with Ewen A. Cameron, Birlinn, 2015).
This important volume illustrates the complex entanglements between power, identity and belonging embedded in multiple historical social networks informing the Scottish Highlands' uneasy relationship with the Atlantic World. Its thematic focus on land, language and networks of (dis)empowerment is an invaluable contribution to contemporary policy discourses in Scotland and elsewhere.--Calum MacLeod, Sustainable Development Consultant and Policy Analyst Scottish Highlands and the Atlantic World is an admirable and important contribution to a growing body of work on the transatlantic connections between Scotland and the Americas, particularly those concerning the Highlands. The outsize Scottish participation in the British Atlantic system is now well-documented, and the Highlands in particular have been the subject of much recent scrutiny. The present study deepens our understanding of this participation, building on recent historiography that seeks to revise an earlier picture of Highlanders as helpless victims of dispossession and displacement.--Kenneth McNeil, Eastern Connecticut State University ""Eighteenth-Century Scotland""