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Neil MacCormick: Law, Philosophy and Politics

1959-65

Read 1941-1959: Born into a Political Family or return to timeline.

 
MacCormick playing the bagpipes

Neil MacCormick was a stellar student, winning prizes and scholarships through his School and University days. He completed an MA with First Class Honours in Philosophy and Literature at Glasgow University from 1959 to 1963, winning the Snell Exhibition to the University of Oxford where he completed a BA with, again, First Class Honours, in Jurisprudence (1963-5).

While in Glasgow, he was a leading participant in Glasgow’s famous debating tradition. As many have observed, he was part of a generation of particularly outstanding debaters, including John Smith and Donald Dewar, who were also family friends, and who remained lifelong friends for MacCormick (despite political differences). Of particular note is MacCormick serving (on 3 November 1961) as the Prime Minister in the Scottish National Government in the Glasgow University Union’s Secretary’s Debate on the motion ‘To establish a separate Parliament for Scotland; and as the Government of Scotland, to join the Common Market regardless of British and Commonwealth ties’. MacCormick was involved in other ways too, serving as the Editor of the Glasgow University Guardian from March 1960 to January 1961. In this period of his undergraduate study, he also held various offices, including President, of the Nationalists Student Political Association at Glasgow University.

 
MacCormick at Balliol College, Oxford, 1965

While in Oxford, MacCormick continued to debate, becoming also the President of the Oxford Union (then principally a debating society). Having been asked to write an article comparing the styles of debating in Glasgow and Oxford, including stating which one he prefers, he said (at once diplomatically and poetically):

…the House [in Glasgow] is packed and smoky, with the gallery crowding in over the speakers at the dispatch box, the stage is perfectly set for debating of unparalleled vigour [for] 12 hours on a Friday… Oxford is a far cry from that partisan fog of argument [where there are] six paper speeches… [But] to speak before that cold and dispassionate house [in Oxford] is an invaluable experience…. I am glad to have had both experiences…
MacCormick, ‘Glasgow Style and University Manners’, Glasgow Herald, 13 February 1965

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Continue to 1965-1972: Scholarly Beginnings - Dundee and Oxford or return to timeline.

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