Renovation Or Revolution?: New Territorial Politics in Ireland and United KingdomJohn Coakley, Brigid Laffan, Jennifer Todd University College Dublin Press, 2005 - 266 lappuses "Renovation or Revolution" - opens a new field of British/Irish studies, beyond devolution studies in the United Kingdom, and beyond Northern Ireland conflict studies. It examines the redistributions of power and the new networks of policy making on these islands. It analyses the extent to which they represent the emergence of a new regional British/Irish political arena within a European and international context. It asks whether we are seeing an emergent revolution in the territorial politics of these islands or whether the changes are simply renovations of an older territorial pattern. This book discusses in detail the implementation of constitutional reforms in Scotland, Wales, England, Northern Ireland and in British, North/South, British/Irish, European and international perspectives. |
Saturs
Conclusion | 16 |
Devolution in the United Kingdom | 18 |
parliament and society | 35 |
Autortiesības | |
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Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
Anglo-Irish Agreement areas argued assembly's Belfast Bogdanor Britain British and Irish British-Irish Council Brussels cent centre chapter civic civil society co-operation coalition Commission Committee context cross-border culture decommissioning devolution devolved administrations dimension Dublin economic elected electoral England English regions established euro Europe European integration European Union executive formal Friday Agreement functions House of Lords identity implementation bodies independence institutions interests Intergovernmental Conference Irish government island issues Labour Party legislation Liberal Democrats majority meetings membership ministers National Assembly nationalist negotiations North-South North/South Ministerial Council Northern Ireland Assembly NSMC Office organisations parliamentary Plaid Cymru programmes referendum regional assemblies relationship represented Republic of Ireland republicans Rhodri Morgan role Scotland Scotland and Wales Scottish Parliament SDLP Secretary significant Sinn Féin social South sovereignty strand three structure of conflict territorial politics Ulster Unionist Unionist Party United Kingdom vote Welsh Westminster