Any constitutional move towards a federal system in the United Kingdom would inevitably be unbalanced by England’s obvious economic, cultural and numerical dominance. Some form of English regional devolution is therefore essential if we are to progress as a multinational state post Scottish and Welsh devolution. This article adopts a deliberately polemical approach to a consideration of the potential role of regional English newspapers in that context, suggesting that their established links with a coherent audience, rooted in place, might allow them to act as a vehicle for debate and nurture a sense of regional identity often absent from contemporary English politics. Regional newspapers are ‘culturally specific’ and have a key role to pla...
England remains the ‘gaping hole in the devolution settlement’. Debate about how England as a whole ...
Laffin M. (2004) Is regional centralism inevitable? The case of the Welsh Assembly, Reg. Studies 38,...
Purpose – To present a paper which examine the UK's approach to devolution in respect of the English...
Constitutional arrangements in parts of the UK have been transformed by political devolution. In Eng...
Constitutional arrangements in parts of the UK have been transformed by political devolution. In Eng...
Constitutional arrangements in parts of the UK have been transformed by political devolution. In Eng...
The effect of the government's 'devolution settlement' on the position of England within the UK show...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Debates about the appropriate territorial scales of government to meet the challenges of economic, p...
Traditionally, the debate over English devolution has been framed by mainstream parties, favouring a...
Debates about the appropriate territorial scales of government to meet the challenges of economic, p...
Within the context of the devolution process in England, Cornwall and the North-East stand out in co...
Governance in the English regions has been undermined and weakened by recent structural changes. Alt...
In the book The Rise of the English regions? devolution as it affects the English Regions is analyse...
Within the context of the devolution process in England, Cornwall and the North-East stand out in co...
England remains the ‘gaping hole in the devolution settlement’. Debate about how England as a whole ...
Laffin M. (2004) Is regional centralism inevitable? The case of the Welsh Assembly, Reg. Studies 38,...
Purpose – To present a paper which examine the UK's approach to devolution in respect of the English...
Constitutional arrangements in parts of the UK have been transformed by political devolution. In Eng...
Constitutional arrangements in parts of the UK have been transformed by political devolution. In Eng...
Constitutional arrangements in parts of the UK have been transformed by political devolution. In Eng...
The effect of the government's 'devolution settlement' on the position of England within the UK show...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Debates about the appropriate territorial scales of government to meet the challenges of economic, p...
Traditionally, the debate over English devolution has been framed by mainstream parties, favouring a...
Debates about the appropriate territorial scales of government to meet the challenges of economic, p...
Within the context of the devolution process in England, Cornwall and the North-East stand out in co...
Governance in the English regions has been undermined and weakened by recent structural changes. Alt...
In the book The Rise of the English regions? devolution as it affects the English Regions is analyse...
Within the context of the devolution process in England, Cornwall and the North-East stand out in co...
England remains the ‘gaping hole in the devolution settlement’. Debate about how England as a whole ...
Laffin M. (2004) Is regional centralism inevitable? The case of the Welsh Assembly, Reg. Studies 38,...
Purpose – To present a paper which examine the UK's approach to devolution in respect of the English...