Readership: Scholars and students of political science, British politics, comparative politics, public law, and political history.
Matthew Flinders, Professor of Parliamentary Government and Governance, University of Sheffield
Contents List of Figures and Tables Acknowledgements Part I: Concepts, Theory and Method Constitutional Anomie Meta-Constitutional Orientations Old Labour, New Labour, 'Blair Paradox' Democratic Analysis Part II: Dimensions of Reform V1 Party System V2 Cabinets V3 Executive-Legislature Relationship V4 Electoral system V5 Interest groups V6 Federal-Unitary V7 Unicameralism-Bicameralism. V8 Constitutional Amendment V9 Judicial Review V10 Central Bank Part III: Analysis and Implications Bi-Constitutionalism Democratic Drift