DEVOLUTION





Office of the Deputy Prime Minister

             Devolution - What we do

The Government was elected in May 1997 with a commitment to a wide- ranging programme of constitutional reform.
Full text of the White Paper for the English Regions                                                                 Down to exercises and details
 


The United Kingdom consists of four countries :
England, Scotland, Wales forming Great Britain,
and Northern Ireland (Ireland until 1922).
 

The rules that apply to the four constituents used to be determined
- and the laws passed -
in London exclusively,
within the British Parliament as seen in Sequence 2.

Things have evolved and If you look at how laws are sorted and organised on the HSMO site
you will see that subdivisions have been created for the laws of three countries of the nation.
 

Long standing claims for more local responsibility were met
through the Local Authorities Act 1972,
where Local Authorities were granted some delegated powers
to produce locally enforceable rules and orders
under the authority of Parliament (by-laws).

This process is also referred to as primary and secondary legislation.
 

The trend was extended in 1999 to the "territories"
through a process known as devolution.

Devolution gives the Welsh and Northern Ireland assemblies
and the Scottish Parliament
shared authority with regard to specific matters such as
education, the health system or the judiciary for example.

The devolution process is not homogenous
It responds more to local circumstances than to a fully planned uniform delegation of powers.
Views on devolution

 
Devolution in the UK - Office of the Deputy Prime Minister
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The Scottish devolution process is probably the most elaborate and advanced of them,
owing to a tradition of systems inherited from the past
where education and justice for example
were organised along similar lines but with local differences.

Scotland now has its own Parliament
(Scottish Parliament)
consisting of Members of the Scottish Parliament (MSP),
a First Minister and an executive.



 

Walesshares more with England than its counterparts and devolution
- although it was meant to satisfy a popular demand -
should not deeply modify the regional landscape in the short term.

It is now run by the National Assembly for Wales
and has its own executive cabinet headed by a First Minister and a cabinet .
 
 


The case of Northern Ireland is much more complex
and reservations were made to the use of devolved powers
in order to preserve peace in the region.

One of the key elements in the debate was the Belfast Agreement
which still proves difficult to put into practice.

In fact, London has retained the possibility to rule Northern Ireland directly
(Direct Rule),
and has done so on several occasions,
when local political forces clashed,
or the situation in the country was sensed from London as damaging or dangerous.
 
 

A later development is currently under way that will affect England.
A White Paper preparing for a bill to develop regions in England has been presented by the government.

Full text of the White Paper for the English Regions
 
 


DETAILS ON THE VARIOUS FORMS OF DEVOLUTION ACROSS THE UK
 


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GRAMMAR

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VOCABULARY

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DETAILS ON THE VARIOUS FORMS OF DEVOLUTION ACROSS THE UK






 

SCOTLAND
 
 
 

Scotland Act 1998
1998 Chapter 46 - continued

An Act to provide for the establishment of a Scottish Parliament

and Administration and other changes in the government of

Scotland; to provide for changes in the constitution and functions

of certain public authorities; to provide for the variation of the basic

rate of income tax in relation to income of Scottish taxpayers in

accordance with a resolution of the Scottish Parliament; to amend

the law about parliamentary constituencies in Scotland; and for

connected purposes.                     [19th November 1998]
 


The Scottish Parliament
 

The Scottish Parliament : An overview
 

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WALES

Government of Wales Act
An Act to establish and make provision about the National Assembly for

Wales and the offices of Auditor General for Wales and Welsh

Administration Ombudsman; to reform certain Welsh public bodies and

abolish certain other Welsh public bodies; and for connected purposes.

[31st July 1998]                            http://www.wales.gov.uk/index.htm

 


The Governance of Wales

The National Assembly For Wales

Key publications
 


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NORTHERN IRELAND
 

Northern Ireland Act 1998
An Act to make new provision for the government of Northern Ireland

for the purpose of implementing the agreement reached at multi-party

talks on Northern Ireland set out in Command Paper 883.

                                                                      [19th November 1998]



Northern Ireland Act 1998
(order - Statutory Instrument)
 

More on the NI Act 1998
 

Northern Ireland Act 2000 (Suspension)
 

Official Site of the Northern Ireland Assembly
New legislation
 


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More documentation

and

 Relationshsips between Scotland, Wales and the central government in London

Concordats