What's going on in Scotland, why the English should care about it: this week's NovaraMedia podcast was a discussion with current and former OurKingdom co-editors.
David Cameron encouraged the people of England, Wales and Northern Ireland to contact their loved ones in Scotland about the independence referendum. Here a father in the north of England writes to his daughter and son in law in Scotland.
The debate over Scotland’s EU entry is being snarled up in the agendas of international actors. The consequences will be bad for all.
What can be learnt from the recent intervention of George Osborne, and why Westminster continues to inadvertently undermine the case for union.
The pound is a free floating currency. No one needs Osborne's permission to use it. But it is also a very expensive currency, destroying Scottish exports and so Scottish jobs. Independence will bring the opportunity for Scots to set up their own currency. It's one they should grab.
To be free of Westminster's distant and venal elite is something the English should support - if the Scots can manage it, perhaps one day England might too.
The inflammatory and absurd rhetoric of the London political elite is a good example of why the vote should be a Yes.
At a gathering of artists for independence, a new generation of Scots activists gathers over a pint, and learns that, whatever the result of the referendum, they can shape their country.
Scotland needs to grow its democratic culture - and the independence debate is helping it do just that.
Whilst campaigners against Scottish independence like to romanticise Britain, Britain is not the greatest political union in the world, and has failed most of the people who live here. It's important to break free of the myths.
What will be the result of the Scottish independence referendum? And what can past referendums around the world teach us about how to read the polls, and teach each side about how to win?
Last week, the Scottish Government launched its blueprint for an independent Scotland. Here, Jo Shaw outlines what it says, and doesn't say, about citizenship.