Introduction
1 A brief history of self-determination and the making of new
states
2 Start me up: how to establish a movement and win support
3 What’s law got to do with it? The legal side of creating a new
state
4 The power and the passion: the international politics of creating
a new state
5 Constitution building: rebuilding the ship at sea
6 Shake your money maker: the economics of becoming a new
country
Conclusions: bringing it all back home
Index
Matt Qvortrup is Professor of Political Science at Coventry University
‘I want to break free is the unapologetic book of political
independence movements, by an advisor who has both global,
ground-level political experience and encyclopaedic historic
knowledge. Would-be states need this book as much as existing
states in danger of runaway nations. If you are neither of these,
you will simply find this book immeasurably informative and
entertaining.’
Dahlia Scheindlin, PhD., international political consultant and
foreign affairs analyst
'Matt Qvortrup’s concise book provides an expert guide to the
practical issues of making a country formally independent,
self-governing and part of the community of democratic
nation-states. Myths are challenged, and historic and contemporary
examples drawn from, which are relevant to how we make sense of
independence in the age of interindependence. Essential reading for
anyone with an interest in self-government in Scotland, Catalonia
and elsewhere.'
Gerry Hassan, Professor of Social Change, Glasgow Caledonian
University and author of Scotland Rising: The Case for
Independence
'Full of insight and rich detail, Matt Qvortrup’s important new
book provides an engaged and wonderfully engaging study of the
passions and politics of state making.'
Professor Alastair Bonnett, author of Off The Map and Beyond The
Map
'This book is a pearl within the study of secessionism that could
only be written by someone knowing both the realpolitik of
state-making and the depths of the multiple academic debates on
this topic.'
Marc Sanjaume-Calvet, Regional & Federal Studies
'A good, well-written, practical survey of much of the law,
politics, & economics of secession which should be informative to
secessionists and counter-secessionists both.'
Mark McGeoghegan, doctoral researcher at the University of
Glasgow
'Overall, this book is refreshing and excellent, making it easy to
recommend. It renders visible and accessible to a wider audience
things that would be easily recognisable to specialists. For those
of us outside of the small circles of the Scottish and British
insider political classes, looking in from diverse standpoints, I
want to break free clearly explains what is possible and, in
general terms, how. It doesn’t play down how hard it is, and it
doesn’t dumb down nor back down from the difficult issues. In
thinking about ‘the now’ and the ‘not yet’ in Scotland, such a
pragmatic contribution is very welcome.'
Hannah Graham, Bella Caledonia
'How does a would-be nation become a legitimate, internationally
recognized state? This short, accessible book is framed as a
step-by-step guide to nation-building. In it, Matt Qvortrup paints
secessionism as a very public divorce; or, at least, a trial
separation.'
Kerryn Baker, Australian National University
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