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National identities : Constitution of the United Kingdom

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Oxford; Blackwell; 1991Description: 181 pISBN:
  • 631182136
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 327.415041 NAT
Summary: This book considers the government of the United Kingdom and relation ships with Ireland in the light of the sense of identity of each of the nations and regions. It examines the extent to which this receives satisfactory institutional expression and whether these institutions need reform, both internally in each case and in the totality of relationships and interrelation ships; and analyses the impact of 1992 and moves to European integra tion. The various authors examine two matters that have run in parallel, but have rarely been discussed together in any depth. They are, firstly, the arguments that the constituent nations of the United Kingdom need more appropriate, democratic national institutions; and, secondly, the argu ments for reform of the UK constitution, including the notion of a federal devolution that provides for national parliaments in Wales and Scotland, and for power-sharing government in Northern Ireland in some new relationship with the Republic.
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This book considers the government of the United Kingdom and relation ships with Ireland in the light of the sense of identity of each of the nations and regions. It examines the extent to which this receives satisfactory institutional expression and whether these institutions need reform, both internally in each case and in the totality of relationships and interrelation ships; and analyses the impact of 1992 and moves to European integra tion.

The various authors examine two matters that have run in parallel, but have rarely been discussed together in any depth. They are, firstly, the arguments that the constituent nations of the United Kingdom need more appropriate, democratic national institutions; and, secondly, the argu ments for reform of the UK constitution, including the notion of a federal devolution that provides for national parliaments in Wales and Scotland, and for power-sharing government in Northern Ireland in some new relationship with the Republic.

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