Matthew Williams 
How Language Works in Politics [EPUB ebook] 
The Impact of Vague Legislation on Policy

Support

There were more colons used in legislation in 2015 than there were words enacted in 1900. Using analysis from machine readings of all legislation enacted between 1900 and 2015, this book discusses the social impact of increasingly elastic legislative language on the contemporary workings of the British constitution.


The hot-button debates of our time — from immigration to European integration, to the creeping power of judges — have, at their core, battles over what policy instructions are authoritative.


The book encourages readers to connect the dots of British statecraft, and to understand how, exactly, public demands are transferred into laws that are then implemented with greater and lesser degrees of success. Crucially, it shows that vague legislation has a tremendous impact on policy delivery, disproportionately affecting the weakest, in areas including immigration, homelessness and anti-discrimination.

€38.99
payment methods

Table of Content

Part One — Language and Politics in the UK;


1 Introduction — How Language Works in Politics;


2 Past — How Has Parliament’s Use of Language Changed?


3 Present — Why Has Parliament’s Use of Language Changed?


Part Two — The Social Impact of Parliament’s Use of Language;


4 Immigration — How Parliament’s Language Affects Central Government Powers;


5 Homelessness — How Parliament’s Language Affects Local Government Duties;


6 Anti-discrimination and Equality — How Parliament’s Language Affects Individual Rights;


Part Three — Fixing the Code;


7 Constitutional Language — Lessons from Beyond Westminster


8 Filling Gaps — The Human Rights Act 1998


Conclusions.

About the author

Matthew Williams is Access and Career Development Fellow, Jesus College, University of Oxford. His research focusses on the sometimes difficult relationships between judges and politicians – where the rule of law meets the power of politics. He has sought to explain the increasing intervention by judges into sensitive public policy domains, such as immigration, anti-discrimination and homelessness.
Buy this ebook and get 1 more FREE!
Language English ● Format EPUB ● Pages 256 ● ISBN 9781529200232 ● File size 5.1 MB ● Publisher Bristol University Press ● City Bristol ● Country GB ● Published 2018 ● Edition 1 ● Downloadable 24 months ● Currency EUR ● ID 6630388 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
Requires a DRM capable ebook reader

More ebooks from the same author(s) / Editor

117,234 Ebooks in this category