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基本説明
This study explores the institutional changes designed to accommodate these devolved authorities, whilst maintaining a central role for the UK government.
Full Description
In 1999 the Blair government introduced British devolution as part of a major programme of constitutional reform. This development posed major questions concerning how relations with the European Union would be affected. Previously, policymaking in the UK had been centralized on Whitehall and Westminster. However, devolution to Scotland and Wales introduced new actors; the Scottish Executive and Parliament, and the National Assembly for Wales. This study explores the institutional changes designed to accommodate these devolved authorities, whilst maintaining a central role for the UK government.
Contents
List of Tables and Figures Preface Abbreviations Introduction: Labour, Constitutional Change and European Policy Adapting to Europe: The Pre-Devolution Story European Business and the Executives European Business and the Assemblies The Post-Devolution Governance of Rural Affairs: Early Impressions Relations Between the Devolved Administrations and the European Union Conclusion Endnotes Appendices Bibliography Index