Brexit and Devolution Documents Database, 2017-2019

DOI

This documentary archive was created as part of the Brexit priority grant, The Repatriation of Competences: Implications for devolution. It is currently being expanded as part of the ESRC large grant, Between Two Unions (ES/P009441/1). At the time of submission, it is complete up to July 2019. The archive is composed of documents including political speeches, government consultations and policy reports, parliamentary debates and reports, and court judgments. All documents are in the public domain, but the archive collated those most relevant to scholars of devolution, and compiled them in a searchable wiki. The wiki isThe devolution settlements in the United Kingdom have been embedded in UK membership of the European Union. Policy areas like agriculture, the environment, fisheries, regional development and justice and home affairs, are both matters for the devolved parliaments and also areas that fall under the authority of the EU. In these policy fields, the EU has provided a common framework that has limited the degree of difference that has emerged within and across the UK, and this has helped keep the nations of the UK together. Whichever model is reached after negotiations, the UK's withdrawal from the EU will affect the powers of the devolved nations in complex ways. It may lead to further decentralisation of power to the devolved institutions. Alternatively, it could lead to powers being recentralized within UK-wide institutions. A third possibility is that it could see the setting up of new forums and process to enable the UK Government and the devolved governments to cooperate more closely on policy areas where their powers overlap. The outcome of the negotiations, and the decisions taken by key actors, will have consequences for the powers and responsibilities of institutions in the devolved nations and their relationships with the rest of the UK. This project will carry out a study of these developments as the Brexit negotiations get underway, and we will examine how the outcomes will shape devolution and relations between the UK's four governments. We will study and support the role of parliaments in scrutinizing the Brexit negotiation processes and the outcomes. We will meet with civil servants to help them understand the effects of different Brexit options on devolution in Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales. Our project will focus on three particular areas of devolved policy - agriculture, the environment and justice and home affairs - to investigate the particular consequences of bringing powers back from the EU to the UK after Brexit. We will work with professionals and representatives from these sectors to help them prepare and plan for Brexit under different scenarios. We will also enhance broader understanding of the process, outcomes and their impact on devolution by producing easy to read and easy to access explanations, analyses and reports, and by taking up opportunities for commenting in the media.

Documents were gathered from official sources (governments, parliaments, courts), political parties and interest groups. These capture the developments related to the effect of Brexit on devolution, with a focus on three policy spheres: agriculture, justice, and renewable energy/climate change. There was no sampling; all relevant documents identified by the researchers were gathered.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-854953
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=283ed12377f520ee8b4f87e0805050a8b4757898ad834d95a0690efd0d92bd5e
Provenance
Creator McEwen, N, University of Edinburgh
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2021
Funding Reference ESRC
Rights Nicola McEwen, University of Edinburgh; The Data Collection is available from an external repository. Access is available via Related Resources.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Text
Discipline Jurisprudence; Law; Social and Behavioural Sciences
Spatial Coverage United Kingdom; Belgium