Constitutional Anomie: Patterns of Democracy and ‘The Governance of Britain’

Author:

Flinders Matthew

Abstract

Abstract‘The Governance of Britain’ agenda represents Gordon Brown's attempt to respond to long-standing criticisms regarding the way in which Labour governments have since 1997 approached the topic of constitutional reform and democratic renewal. The central argument of this article is that the Labour Party remains afflicted by constitutional anomie and these recent documents, combined with the behaviour of politicians, have done little in response. This article is of methodological importance because it assesses the cumulative impact of recent reforms through the application of Lijphart's framework and reflects on the utility of this tool. It is of conceptual importance because the results of the systematic analysis add further weight to the accusation of constitutional anomie while also allowing the development of a new conceptual tool – bi-constitutionality – which offers a way of understanding long-standing debates. The article is of normative importance because it avoids the descriptive-prescriptive approach to constitutional literature that has dominated British political studies, and it is relevant for comparative politics because it replicates and takes forward a methodology that has been applied around the world. In doing so it provides a critical case of executive politics and statecraft vis-à-vis constitutional reform.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science

Reference66 articles.

1. See C. Hay and G. Stoker, ‘Who's Failing Whom?’, in Political Studies Association, Failing Politics? A Response to the Governance of Britain Green Paper, Newcastle, PSA, 2007.

2. Lijphart, Patterns of Democracy, p. 210.

3. Norris, ‘The Twilight of Westminster?’.

4. Ibid., p. 61.

5. King, The British Constitution, p. 352.

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