Patrick Dunleavy looks at how well the dominant centre of power in the British state operates – spanning the Prime Minister, Cabinet, Cabinet committees, ministers and critical central departments. How accountable and responsive to Parliament and the public is this ‘core executive’? And how effective are these key centres of decision-making and the rest of Whitehall government, in making policy? Do they consistently serve UK citizens’ interests
Comparing Westminster explores how the governmental elites in Australia, Britain, Canada, New Zealan...
As part of our 2017 Audit of UK Democracy, Artemis Photiadou and Patrick Dunleavy consider how well ...
Forming a coalition involves compromise, so a prime minister heading up a coalition government, even...
The ‘Core Executive’ is the term applied, since the 1990s, to the key individuals and institutions t...
The centre of central government comprises three sets of institutions: the Prime Minister’s Office b...
This edited collections brings together a selection of key readings to provide a timely reassessment...
Prime ministerial predominance can enable the prime minister to lead, if not command, the core execu...
The article contributes to debates about core executive capacity by analyzing the British and Japane...
Institutions cannot be understood without exploring the actors who occupy them, while actors cannot ...
Citizens and civil society have most contact with the administrative apparatus of the UK state, whos...
Od końca II wojny światowej aż do 2010 roku rządy w Zjednoczonym Królestwie sprawowała jedna z dwóch...
study of power. Cabinet and the executive appear to be the epitome of national authority, but not of...
In the build up to general elections there is invariably a wealth of discourse on constitutional and...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Palgrave Macmillan via t...
Although shrouded in convention and mystery, the Minister of the Crown is critical to the effective ...
Comparing Westminster explores how the governmental elites in Australia, Britain, Canada, New Zealan...
As part of our 2017 Audit of UK Democracy, Artemis Photiadou and Patrick Dunleavy consider how well ...
Forming a coalition involves compromise, so a prime minister heading up a coalition government, even...
The ‘Core Executive’ is the term applied, since the 1990s, to the key individuals and institutions t...
The centre of central government comprises three sets of institutions: the Prime Minister’s Office b...
This edited collections brings together a selection of key readings to provide a timely reassessment...
Prime ministerial predominance can enable the prime minister to lead, if not command, the core execu...
The article contributes to debates about core executive capacity by analyzing the British and Japane...
Institutions cannot be understood without exploring the actors who occupy them, while actors cannot ...
Citizens and civil society have most contact with the administrative apparatus of the UK state, whos...
Od końca II wojny światowej aż do 2010 roku rządy w Zjednoczonym Królestwie sprawowała jedna z dwóch...
study of power. Cabinet and the executive appear to be the epitome of national authority, but not of...
In the build up to general elections there is invariably a wealth of discourse on constitutional and...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Palgrave Macmillan via t...
Although shrouded in convention and mystery, the Minister of the Crown is critical to the effective ...
Comparing Westminster explores how the governmental elites in Australia, Britain, Canada, New Zealan...
As part of our 2017 Audit of UK Democracy, Artemis Photiadou and Patrick Dunleavy consider how well ...
Forming a coalition involves compromise, so a prime minister heading up a coalition government, even...