Changing States, Changing Nations : Constitutional Reform and National Identity in the Late Twentieth Century /: Constitutional Reform and National Identity in the Late Twentieth Century. (2021)
- Record Type:
- Book
- Title:
- Changing States, Changing Nations : Constitutional Reform and National Identity in the Late Twentieth Century /: Constitutional Reform and National Identity in the Late Twentieth Century. (2021)
- Main Title:
- Changing States, Changing Nations : Constitutional Reform and National Identity in the Late Twentieth Century
- Further Information:
- Note: Andrew McDonald.
- Authors:
- McDonald, Andrew
- Contents:
- 1. Constitutional Reform and National Identity I. Constitutional Reform in Britain under Blair and Brown II. Comparative Studies of Constitutional Reform III. Rationale for Selection of Case Studies IV. Definitions: Nation and Nation State V. National Myths and Symbols VI. National Identity VII. Changes in National Identity VIII. National Identity and Constitutional Reform IX. Comparative Case Studies X. Changing States, Changing Nations 2. 'Doing Good By Stealth': Tony Blair and Reform of the British ConstitutionI. Labour and Constitutional Reform II. Labour and the Maximalists: The 1987 Parliament III. Labour Policy-making in the Wake of the 1992 DefeatIV. Labour and the Nation V. New Labour and the Constitution VI. Shuffling the Pack: Preparing for Government VII. New Labour, No Britain VIII. Cook-Maclennan IX. From the Manifesto to the Polls X. The Election XI. Into Government XII. The First Session: May 1997–November 1998 XIII. The Second Session: November 1998–November 1999 XIV. The End of the Affair: New Labour and the Liberal Democrats XV. The Third and Fourth Sessions: November 1999–June 2001 XVI. The First Term: Constitutional Reform Delivered? XVII. The 2001 Manifesto XVIII. The Constitution in the Second Term: 2001–05 XIX. The Constitution in the Third Term: Blair's Final Years XX. Britain's Quiet Constitutional Revolution 3. 'Just Watch Me': Pierre Trudeau and the Canadian Constitution I. Canada at the Centenary II. Enter Trudeau III. From the Centenary to1. Constitutional Reform and National Identity I. Constitutional Reform in Britain under Blair and Brown II. Comparative Studies of Constitutional Reform III. Rationale for Selection of Case Studies IV. Definitions: Nation and Nation State V. National Myths and Symbols VI. National Identity VII. Changes in National Identity VIII. National Identity and Constitutional Reform IX. Comparative Case Studies X. Changing States, Changing Nations 2. 'Doing Good By Stealth': Tony Blair and Reform of the British ConstitutionI. Labour and Constitutional Reform II. Labour and the Maximalists: The 1987 Parliament III. Labour Policy-making in the Wake of the 1992 DefeatIV. Labour and the Nation V. New Labour and the Constitution VI. Shuffling the Pack: Preparing for Government VII. New Labour, No Britain VIII. Cook-Maclennan IX. From the Manifesto to the Polls X. The Election XI. Into Government XII. The First Session: May 1997–November 1998 XIII. The Second Session: November 1998–November 1999 XIV. The End of the Affair: New Labour and the Liberal Democrats XV. The Third and Fourth Sessions: November 1999–June 2001 XVI. The First Term: Constitutional Reform Delivered? XVII. The 2001 Manifesto XVIII. The Constitution in the Second Term: 2001–05 XIX. The Constitution in the Third Term: Blair's Final Years XX. Britain's Quiet Constitutional Revolution 3. 'Just Watch Me': Pierre Trudeau and the Canadian Constitution I. Canada at the Centenary II. Enter Trudeau III. From the Centenary to Victoria IV. Stasis V. From PQ Victory to Liberal Defeat VI. A Final ChanceVII. Quebec Votes VIII. Constitutional Reform in the Wake of the No Vote IX. Going it Alone X. One Last Try XI. Aftermath XII. Consequences XIII. The Sesquicentenary of Confederation 4. 'A Small But Significant Step': Australia and the Republic I. The Combatants II. Enter Paul Keating III. Mapping the Course: The Republic Advisory Committee IV. Becalmed V. John Howard and the Republic VI. The Convention VII. Australia Votes No VIII. Why the Republic was Lost IX. Where Next for Republican Australia? X. Constitutional Change and National Identity 5. 'Power to The People'?: The UK Constitution After Blair I. Brown Arrives II. BritishnessIII. Governance of Britain IV. The Coalition and Constitutional Reform V. Brexit VI. What Next for the British Constitution? VII. Public Engagement VIII. Public Reaction to the Reforms IX. The Future of Britain X. Brown and the Constitution 6. Changing States, Changing Nations I. Three Stories: One Pattern? II. Lessons for Reformers? III. Re-engineering National Identity IV. Changing States, Changing Nations. … (more)
- Publisher Details:
- London : Hart Publishing
- Publication Date:
- 2021
- Extent:
- 1 online resource (256 pages)
- Subjects:
- Political science & theory
Law, citizenship & rights for the lay person
Law -- Constitutional
Law -- General
Political Science -- Government -- Comparative
Law -- Public
Constitutional & administrative law - Languages:
- English
- ISBNs:
- 9781509928736
1509928731 - Related ISBNs:
- 9781509928729
- Access Rights:
- Legal Deposit; Only available on premises controlled by the deposit library and to one user at any one time; The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK).
- Access Usage:
- Restricted: Printing from this resource is governed by The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK) and UK copyright law currently in force.
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library HMNTS - ELD.DS.594183
- Ingest File:
- 04_062.xml