The referendum will be held on the 700th anniversary of the Battle of Bannockburn, when Scottish forces routed the English army. But polls show just 30 percent of Scots support independence.
"The argument the SNP used was to have Scotland as an independent country within the European Union. Their view was that they'd eventually join the euro. Now because of what's happened with the euro, nobody really wants to join the euro at all," said Maddox.
The Scottish referendum has also helped to energize independence movements elsewhere. In the Spanish region of Catalonia, Madrid has blocked a referendum - but more than half of Catalans say they want to break away.
Barcelona resident Ramon Mora echoes the call of many Catalans. He says the sooner they have a date for their referendum, the better.
In Belgium, the separatist New Flemish Alliance won a swathe of local elections this month. Voters say it is about the economy.
Francois Verswijvel, a resident of the Flemish city of Antwerp, says it could spell the end of Belgium. In his opinion, Belgians can no longer go on with the French-speaking southern part of Belgium, which he says is costing the country a lot of money.
James Ker-Lindsay of the London School of Economics says in many cases, the economic crisis has fueled long-existing grievances and independence movements.
"A lot of unhappiness about the state of various countries in Europe and movements which have long existed but I think now have a much greater degree of freedom to express this idea of separatism. But in terms of viability, to my mind absolutely no question at all, an independent Scotland, an independent Flanders and an independent Catalonia are quite clearly viable entities," said Ker-Lindsay.
最新
2013-11-27
2013-11-27
2013-11-27
2013-11-27
2013-11-27
2013-11-27