
What needs to change in Westminster and Whitehall to make devolution work?
The devolution settlement of 1999 marked a major …
September 20, 202359m 31s
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Show Notes
The devolution settlement of 1999 marked a major constitutional development for the UK, but over two decades on devolution is anything but settled. The devolved governments and parliaments have become established features of the UK constitution, but the UK’s central institutions have failed to adapt. With further devolution on the agenda, there may be more changes in the near future.
So what can the UK government, parliament and civil service do to improve the workings of devolution? How can the UK government work with devolved legislatures to achieve common aims whilst also respecting the desire for policy divergence in different nations? How can the UK parliament reflect the multi-national state? And what civil service reforms are needed to facilitate co-operation over conflict?
Speakers:
Rt Hon Sir Robert Buckland MP, former Secretary of State for Wales
Christine Jardine MP, Member of Parliament for Edinburgh West and Liberal Democrat Spokesperson (Scotland)
Ciaran Martin, Professor of Practice in the Management of Public Organisations at the Blavatnik School of Government
Jessica Studdert, Deputy Chief Executive of New Local
The event was chaired by Professor Michael Kenny, Director of Bennett Institute for Public Policy, University of Cambridge