This article examines the electoral discourse associated with state decentralisation. It offers an original perspective that complements existing studies by detailing the discourse-based dimension of policy agenda-setting associated with Scottish and Welsh devolution in UK state-wide parties’ general election manifestos 1945–2010. Innovative aspects include a combined quantitative (issue-salience) and qualitative (policy framing) methodological technique transferable to other (quasi-)federal jurisdictions. The present UK findings reveal policy on devolution to be part of a fluid and contested discursive process. Concerned to maintain the union-state, the principal parties present a ‘punctuated narrative’ as they shift policy positions on th...
In this article I propose a model that explains first time devolution in unitary, centralised states...
In this dissertation, I ask why certain types of parties would agree to support creating or empoweri...
Devolution in the UK was not born out of any constitutional or political ideology or principle. The ...
In Scotland and Wales devolved governance has established an interesting paradox. Scotland, at the l...
The UK’s devolution reforms have been piecemeal, directed at specific territorial issues in one or o...
Debates concerning decentralisation in the UK date back at least to the beginning of the nineteenth ...
In Scotland, after an early focus on the policy-making process, the agenda concentrated on distribut...
The institutions of Scottish devolution were designed using the majoritarian Westminster system as a...
The chapter forms part of a research collection designed to pioneer the study of political decentral...
The article addresses how Britain's major statewide political parties—Labour, the Conservatives, and...
Over recent decades there has been an international shift towards multi-level governance. Against th...
Goodwin M., Jones M. and Jones R. (2005) Devolution, constitutional change and economic development:...
Goodwin M., Jones M. and Jones R. (2005) Devolution, constitutional change and economic development:...
The article addresses how Britain’s major statewide political parties—Labour, the Conservatives, and...
The United Kingdom is a state of unions. It evolved through a series of diverse unions, each leaving...
In this article I propose a model that explains first time devolution in unitary, centralised states...
In this dissertation, I ask why certain types of parties would agree to support creating or empoweri...
Devolution in the UK was not born out of any constitutional or political ideology or principle. The ...
In Scotland and Wales devolved governance has established an interesting paradox. Scotland, at the l...
The UK’s devolution reforms have been piecemeal, directed at specific territorial issues in one or o...
Debates concerning decentralisation in the UK date back at least to the beginning of the nineteenth ...
In Scotland, after an early focus on the policy-making process, the agenda concentrated on distribut...
The institutions of Scottish devolution were designed using the majoritarian Westminster system as a...
The chapter forms part of a research collection designed to pioneer the study of political decentral...
The article addresses how Britain's major statewide political parties—Labour, the Conservatives, and...
Over recent decades there has been an international shift towards multi-level governance. Against th...
Goodwin M., Jones M. and Jones R. (2005) Devolution, constitutional change and economic development:...
Goodwin M., Jones M. and Jones R. (2005) Devolution, constitutional change and economic development:...
The article addresses how Britain’s major statewide political parties—Labour, the Conservatives, and...
The United Kingdom is a state of unions. It evolved through a series of diverse unions, each leaving...
In this article I propose a model that explains first time devolution in unitary, centralised states...
In this dissertation, I ask why certain types of parties would agree to support creating or empoweri...
Devolution in the UK was not born out of any constitutional or political ideology or principle. The ...