Affiliation:
1. Department of Politics, University of Durham
Abstract
Scholars examining British-European relations typically ascribe UK governmental positions firstly to a combination of distinct and incompatible values, attitudes, and beliefs stemming from historical experience; secondly to a distinct and incompatible set of functional imperatives – namely less interaction with European partners than is the case for other EU member states; and third a distinct and incompatible set of domestic interests. This article challenges these views. It presents evidence to suggest that British governments have failed to assimilate social demands, and that the reason is an under-recognized and untheorized intervening variable – namely the structure of decisionmaking institutions in Parliament. It models the influence of this variable, and suggests that historical institutionalist theory captures key elements of the variable in a manner superior to extant approaches.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
23 articles.
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1. Introduction: Brexit!;St Antony's Series;2023
2. Deconstructing Brexit Discourses;CRIT EUR STUD;2021-07-22
3. Opposing the EU in the EP at the Time of Populism;Patterns of Opposition in the European Parliament;2020-09-22
4. Introduction;Post-Truth, Post-Press, Post-Europe;2020-09-21
5. A changing democracy: contemporary challenges to the British political tradition;Policy Studies;2018-03-27