This article considers how UK governments use the Speech from the Throne (also known as the Gracious Speech and the King's or the Queen's Speech) to define and articulate their executive and legislative agenda. The analysis uses the policy content coding system of the Policy Agendas Project to measure total executive and legislative attention to particular issues. This generates the longest known data series of the political agenda in the UK, from the date of the first Parliament Act in 1911 right up to the end of 2008, nearly a century of government agenda setting. Using these data, the article identifies long-run institutional and policy stability in this agenda-setting instrument, and variation in its length and executive–legislative con...
In Westminster systems, governments enjoy strong agenda-setting powers but are accountable to an inq...
In Westminster systems, governments enjoy strong agenda-setting powers but are accountable to an inq...
At the beginning of each Parliamentary session, the Dutch Queen gives a speech (Troonrede) in which ...
In the United Kingdom, the transmission between policy promises and statutes is assumed to be both r...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>One of the key expecta...
In the United Kingdom, the transmission between policy promises and statutes is assumed to be both r...
This article explores the politics of attention in Britain from 1940 to 2005. It uses the Speech fro...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The policy agenda is the topi...
Dynamic agenda representation can be understood through the transmission of the priorities of the pu...
At the beginning of each parliamentary session, almost all European govern-ments give a speech in wh...
At the beginning of each Parliamentary session, almost all European governments give a speech in whi...
At the beginning of each parliamentary session, almost all European governments give a speech in whi...
Through a unique dataset covering half a century of policy-making in Britain, this book traces how t...
This article represents the effect of public opinion on government attention in the form of an error...
The Policy Agendas Project collects and organises data from official documents to trace changes in t...
In Westminster systems, governments enjoy strong agenda-setting powers but are accountable to an inq...
In Westminster systems, governments enjoy strong agenda-setting powers but are accountable to an inq...
At the beginning of each Parliamentary session, the Dutch Queen gives a speech (Troonrede) in which ...
In the United Kingdom, the transmission between policy promises and statutes is assumed to be both r...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>One of the key expecta...
In the United Kingdom, the transmission between policy promises and statutes is assumed to be both r...
This article explores the politics of attention in Britain from 1940 to 2005. It uses the Speech fro...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The policy agenda is the topi...
Dynamic agenda representation can be understood through the transmission of the priorities of the pu...
At the beginning of each parliamentary session, almost all European govern-ments give a speech in wh...
At the beginning of each Parliamentary session, almost all European governments give a speech in whi...
At the beginning of each parliamentary session, almost all European governments give a speech in whi...
Through a unique dataset covering half a century of policy-making in Britain, this book traces how t...
This article represents the effect of public opinion on government attention in the form of an error...
The Policy Agendas Project collects and organises data from official documents to trace changes in t...
In Westminster systems, governments enjoy strong agenda-setting powers but are accountable to an inq...
In Westminster systems, governments enjoy strong agenda-setting powers but are accountable to an inq...
At the beginning of each Parliamentary session, the Dutch Queen gives a speech (Troonrede) in which ...