Twenty-first Century Clientelism?
State and Community on the
Isle of Rum, Scotland
Nicola Thompson* and Jane Atterton
Abstract
This article utilises the concept of the clientelist countryside to examine the similarities
and differences between areas dominated by private estates and areas dominated by large
public land holdings. While the paternalistic countryside has been widely studied in
England, there has been little in-depth work on the clientelist countryside. Drawing on
empirical work on the Isle of Rum, located off the west coast of Scotland, the article
argues that there are important differences between paternalistic and clientelist country-
side typologies. Rum has a population of 31 and is wholly owned by the statutory nature
conservation agency, Scottish Natural Heritage. The article illustrates how this public
status structures a whole set of social and economic relations between those who live and
work there and those who have a professional involvement on Rum. State ownership has
created a situation where those who live on the island are divided by their differing
conceptions of their professional, community and individual responsibilities. The article
concludes by highlighting four key points of differentiation between the paternalistic and
clientelist countryside.
Introduction
I
n Constructing the countryside Marsden et al. (1993) argued that rurality has too
frequently been constructed as a homogenous entity. They argued for a more
nuanced conception of rural space in which the differentiated nature of the country-
side was better articulated. Hence, contemporary researchers should focus on the
‘complex assemblage of economic, social and political elements’ which ‘will give
individual rural areas quite different complexions’ (Marsden et al. 1993, pp. 185–186).
Four categories, or types, of countryside designed to ‘encapsulate major tendencies’
were identified in order to understand the major points of differentiation. The four
types were: the contested countryside (where traditional agricultural and development
interests are increasingly coming into conflict with incomer populations attracted by
the high-quality residential environments), the preserved countryside (dominated by
© 2010 The Authors. Sociologia Ruralis © 2010 European Society for Rural Sociology.
Published by Blackwell Publishing, 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford OX4 2DQ, UK
Sociologia Ruralis, Vol 50, Number 4, October 2010 DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9523.2010.00509.x