The independence referendum is an important 'constitutional moment' for Scotland and the UK, not only because it may usher in a new era, but also because it has the power to shape our understanding of the contemporary constitution. Focusing on the referendum as a constitutional process, this article explores its implications for contested questions about the role of the people as the authors of constitutional change and about the location of constituent power within the British constitution. It also considers questions of constitutional process after the referendum
The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the constitutional debate in the UK vis-à-vis...
In the build up to the referendum on whether Scotland should become an independent country this pape...
Scotland voted No to independence on 18 September. Eve Hepburn writes that the referendum has opened...
The independence referendum is an important 'constitutional moment' for Scotland and the UK, not onl...
The September 2014 Scottish independence referendum was an event of profound constitutional and poli...
The September 2014 Scottish independence referendum was an event of profound constitutional and poli...
The independence referendum arose out of an unanticipated set of political circumstances, rather tha...
Whatever the result of Scotland’s independence referendum, careful constitutional thinking will be n...
In October 2012, the British and Scottish governments formed an historic agreement for the holding o...
The UK's transitional constitution dates to 1707, when two conceptions of constitutionalism—parliame...
This paper will examine the dynamics of devolution in the United Kingdom since the 2007 elections to...
In October 2022, the UK Supreme Court unanimously held that the Scottish Parliament lacks the power ...
This article explores the course of Scottish politics since the establishment of the devolved parlia...
the article is devoted to the analysis of the referendum in Scotland in 2014 as a peaceful way of pe...
There are no universally applicable procedural standards under international law for independence re...
The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the constitutional debate in the UK vis-à-vis...
In the build up to the referendum on whether Scotland should become an independent country this pape...
Scotland voted No to independence on 18 September. Eve Hepburn writes that the referendum has opened...
The independence referendum is an important 'constitutional moment' for Scotland and the UK, not onl...
The September 2014 Scottish independence referendum was an event of profound constitutional and poli...
The September 2014 Scottish independence referendum was an event of profound constitutional and poli...
The independence referendum arose out of an unanticipated set of political circumstances, rather tha...
Whatever the result of Scotland’s independence referendum, careful constitutional thinking will be n...
In October 2012, the British and Scottish governments formed an historic agreement for the holding o...
The UK's transitional constitution dates to 1707, when two conceptions of constitutionalism—parliame...
This paper will examine the dynamics of devolution in the United Kingdom since the 2007 elections to...
In October 2022, the UK Supreme Court unanimously held that the Scottish Parliament lacks the power ...
This article explores the course of Scottish politics since the establishment of the devolved parlia...
the article is devoted to the analysis of the referendum in Scotland in 2014 as a peaceful way of pe...
There are no universally applicable procedural standards under international law for independence re...
The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the constitutional debate in the UK vis-à-vis...
In the build up to the referendum on whether Scotland should become an independent country this pape...
Scotland voted No to independence on 18 September. Eve Hepburn writes that the referendum has opened...