In the immediate aftermath of the Scottish independence referendum, Prime Minister David Cameron raised the ‘English Question’ by advocating English Votes for English Laws in the House of Commons. This article explains why. It uses findings from the 2014 Future of England Survey of attitudes to constitutional issues in England. It reveals a group of interlinked concerns in England: about the advantages Scotland is perceived to have in the UK Union, about the absence of institutional recognition of England in the UK political system, and about the European Union and immigration. It shows that these concerns are distinctively English, held in a broadly uniform way across England and held most strongly by people in England who identify themsel...
The form and condition of English nationalism is very closely linked to the changes which are curren...
The 2014 Scottish Referendum shed light on a problem that has faced the United Kingdom for the past ...
Conservative Party supporters have often been characterised as resembling 'Little Englanders &a...
In the immediate aftermath of the Scottish independence referendum, Prime Minister David Cameron rai...
For much of the 2010-15 Parliament the English Question was not a conspicuous feature of political d...
Hours after the Scottish independence referendum results were in, David Cameron announced that any f...
In fulfilling the demands of Brexit voters, the government faces great obstacles, both from within a...
Rarely has a government been so keen to promulgate a sense of national identity as that led by Gordo...
In the 1975 referendum England provided the strongest support for European integration, with a much ...
This article assesses how the main British multi-national parties, whilst retaining an attachment of...
Until the Brexit referendum, there was widespread doubt as to whether English nationalism existed at...
In this article I consider why the expected English backlash to the asymmetric UK devolution settlem...
In the newly published IPPR pamphlet The Dog That Finally Barked: England as an Emerging Political C...
Devolution at the end of the 1990s has led to numerous consequences and transformations in British p...
Britain’s vote to leave the EU was supposed to help settle Britain’s ‘European Question’ – Tim Olive...
The form and condition of English nationalism is very closely linked to the changes which are curren...
The 2014 Scottish Referendum shed light on a problem that has faced the United Kingdom for the past ...
Conservative Party supporters have often been characterised as resembling 'Little Englanders &a...
In the immediate aftermath of the Scottish independence referendum, Prime Minister David Cameron rai...
For much of the 2010-15 Parliament the English Question was not a conspicuous feature of political d...
Hours after the Scottish independence referendum results were in, David Cameron announced that any f...
In fulfilling the demands of Brexit voters, the government faces great obstacles, both from within a...
Rarely has a government been so keen to promulgate a sense of national identity as that led by Gordo...
In the 1975 referendum England provided the strongest support for European integration, with a much ...
This article assesses how the main British multi-national parties, whilst retaining an attachment of...
Until the Brexit referendum, there was widespread doubt as to whether English nationalism existed at...
In this article I consider why the expected English backlash to the asymmetric UK devolution settlem...
In the newly published IPPR pamphlet The Dog That Finally Barked: England as an Emerging Political C...
Devolution at the end of the 1990s has led to numerous consequences and transformations in British p...
Britain’s vote to leave the EU was supposed to help settle Britain’s ‘European Question’ – Tim Olive...
The form and condition of English nationalism is very closely linked to the changes which are curren...
The 2014 Scottish Referendum shed light on a problem that has faced the United Kingdom for the past ...
Conservative Party supporters have often been characterised as resembling 'Little Englanders &a...