Dr Juliette Desportes
Biography
Postdoctoral Research Assistant
My research focuses on the ways Highland land has been managed, transformed, and contested across the long eighteenth-century. I am particularly interested in rural histories and geographies of protest and resistance and the politics of the ‘land question’ in Scotland in the early modern and modern periods.
I am currently a Postdoctoral Research Assistant on the Leverhulme Trust funded project ‘Resistance to Improvement in the ÍøÆØ³Ô¹Ï and Islands, 1750-1820’ with Dr Iain Robertson (ÍøÆØ³Ô¹Ï) and Professor Carl Griffin (University of Sussex). The project investigates how rural workers in the ÍøÆØ³Ô¹Ï sought to defend their livelihoods and ways of life in the age of radical ‘improvements’ which transformed the social and economic basis of Scottish agriculture.
I completed my PhD at the University of Glasgow in 2024. My thesis explored the processes of land ‘improvement’ and the ways the Highland region was used as a site of experiment for socio-economic, cultural, social, and intellectual improvement by the British state and its agents. I took as a case study the Highland estates forcefully annexed by the Crown after the Jacobite rising of 1745 and managed by the Scottish legal and landowning elite until 1784. I am currently writing my first monograph which will be based on my thesis and published with Edinburgh University Press as part of their 'Scotland’s Land' series edited by Professor Annie Tindley.
I am particularly interested in how history and historians can serve a wider public and I am always keen to collaborate with communities and heritage organisations. In the past, I have worked as a historical consultant in the private sector and have a longstanding collaboration with the Urras Oighreachd Ghabhsainn in the Isle of Lewis as part of the project.
Publications
Publications
- ‘Poor Relief as ‘improvement’: Moral and Spatial Economies of Care in Scotland, c.1720s-1790s’, with Eliska Bujokova, Continuity and Change, 33 (2023), pp.113-136.
- ''Most Useful Labor in Time of Peace’: Early Crofting Schemes in the Annexed Estates, 1763-1784’, Northern Scotland, 14.2 (2023), pp. 108-126.
- , Area (2024)