Sorry Owlbread, I looked it up and I saw it was 32 but for some reason I has 18 on the brain. It seems absurd to me that you don't have anything like Parish councils.
We had parish councils for about 30 years at the turn of the century but they were abolished. The problem is Scotland has always had a very unique system where we periodically downsize everything, close to our original local government system pre-Union which was more localised and included stuff like Burghs etc, then we give it 20 years and make it all bigger again. At one time we had the "Regional Authorities" which were bloody enormous.
Yeah crofting is well and good, and it's nice they can buy their land now though the worry there that once land titles are drawn up and can be bought and sold, it leads inevitably to the accumulation and hereditary bestowment of large tracts.
It's a considerable problem.
Fun fact: back when you had to be a landowner to vote, in 1820 the Welsh electorate was comprised of around 18,700 voters. Scotland had double the population but only 2,889 voters. Scotland is still the least equitable country for land ownership in the West. Do you think that would change in an independent Scotland?
Personally, not immediately. Independence may give us the freedom to be more radical in how we deal with the problem, such as changing the way land is owned in this country completely to "land is rented by landowners from the community, not vice versa", similar to how a number of Hebridean islands are managed these days after being bought from the local nobles (many remain under noble ownership) and perhaps the inevitable coming of the Republic will help to break the grip the aristocracy still have, but generally the land ownership issue runs alongside independence as one of the main Scottish political and sociological issues.