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Interparliamentary Relations and the Future of Devolution in the UK 1998-2018
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29 January 2024

Interparliamentary Relations and the Future of Devolution in the UK provides a political analysis of interparliamentary relations at a time when devolved legislatures are more evidently asserting their influence. Chapters provide the context necessary to understanding current complexities, considering the future of UK politics in response to critical circumstances such as Brexit and the Covid-19 pandemic. Margaret Arnott recognises how Tensions between competing narratives about the future working of devolution in the UK particularly over the future relationship of the devolved nations to the UK, were all too evident in contemporary political narratives.
Written at a time of intensified political debates and the increasing questioning of models of democracy, Interparliamentary Relations and the Future of Devolution in the UK addresses a significant gap in academic literature to consider both the collective future of UK governance and that of the individual nations who form it.
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Comparative Politics, Political structure and processes, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / General, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / General, Public administration, Comparative politics
Margaret A. Arnott is Professor of Public Policy, University of the West of Scotland, UK. Margaret’s research interests and expertise include politics of public policy, constitutional politics, territorial politics and governance. She was previously a PSA/UK Parliament Academic Fellow (2016-2020), where she studied devolution in UK Parliament. More recently, she was a Scottish Parliament Academic Fellow (2022-2023) with a research focus entitled ‘Parliamentary Procedures & Practices: Virtual & Hybrid Arrangements and Working’.
Chapter 1. Background and Scope
Chapter 2. A Brief History of Devolution in The Multi-National UK State 1998-2020
Chapter 3. Inter-Parliamentary Relations and Inter-Governmental Relations in Devolved UK 1998-2020
Chapter 4. Unsettling of Asymmetrical Devolution in UK 1999-2017
Chapter 5. Expert Stakeholder Interviews
Chapter 6. Concluding Comments