Does It Matter If the House of Lords isn't Reformed? Perspectives from a Symposium at Trinity Hall, Cambridge
Conor Farrington
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Roll Calls, Cycling and the 'Iowa School' Research Tradition in British Political Science
Iain McLean
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SPS Student Cover Sheet/ Feedback Sheet *Indicated fields MUST be completed by student. *Exam number B060820 Course Parliamentary Studies *Essay title To what extent does the House of Lords suffer from a democratic deficit? *Word Count 2,497
Carla Beaton
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‘A More Representative Chamber’: Representation and the House of Lords
Andrew Defty
The Journal of Legislative Studies, 2012
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Lords Reform: Some Inconvenient Truths
Conor Farrington
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What Do Members Want? 'Peer Pressure" and Legislative Rebellion in the British House of Lords
David Fisk
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The Joint Committee report on reform of the House of Lords is mostly headed for the dustbin of history–because this mess of arcane proposals cannot be sold to voters
Patrick Dunleavy
2012
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Analysing Reform: The House of Commons, 2001?5
Matthew Flinders
Political Studies, 2007
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Does it really matter that the House of Lords is still unelected?
Josie Newman
Does it really matter that the House of Lords is still unelected? , 2016
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The Politics of Procedural Choice: Regulating Legislative Debate in the UK House of Commons, 1811–2015
Niels Goet
British Journal of Political Science, 2019
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Call for Paper : Getting the Houses in Order: agenda-setting, policy-making, and legislating in the House of Lords
Anne Cousson, lucie de carvalho
2019
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Reforming the House of Lords
Murray Lee Eiland
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The Price of Conscience: The Electoral Correlates and Consequences of Free Votes and Rebellions in the British House of Commons, 1987–92
Charles Pattie
British Journal of Political Science, 1994
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The Party's Over: Blueprint for a Very English Revolution
Barbara Goodwin
Contemporary Political Theory, 2005
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House of Lords Reform
Gopesh Pathak
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Book review: the contemporary House of Lords: Westminster bicameralism revived
Gordon Bannerman
2013
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The twilight of Westminster? Electoral reform and its consequences
Pippa Norris
2001
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‘A naked scrap for party advantage, dressed up as a principled defence of democracy’: the House of Lords on the number of MPs and defining their constituencies
Charles Pattie
2011
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Democratic deficiencies in both Houses of Parliament
Sheena Nasim
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Turning Over a New Leaf in the House of Lords (2015) 6 UKSCY 1 (co-authored with Dr Daniel Clarry)
Christopher Sargeant
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Parliament and Parliamentarians: The Worrying Case of the City of London (Ward Elections) Bill Parliamentary procedure and the role of the representative
Lee Salter
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The Policy Power of the Westminster Parliament: The “Parliamentary State” and the Empirical Evidence
Philip Cowley
Governance, 2015
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Shifting the Balance? Parliament, the Executive and the British Constitution
Matthew Flinders
Political Studies, 2002
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Dynamic Representation in Britain
Mark Franklin
Critical Elections: British Parties and Voters in Long-Term Perspective Critical elections: British parties and voters in long-term perspective, 1999
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The Past of Parliamentary and Legislative Studies
Emma Crewe
Parliamentary Affairs
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Parliament and Parliamentarians: The Worrying Case of the City of London (Ward Elections) Bill
Lee Salter
The Political Quarterly, 2004
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Westminster as Usual? Three Interpretations for the UK Democracy
Marco Giuliani
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The Impact of the 1918 Reform Act on the House of Commons
Martin Farr
Parliamentary History, 2018
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The Present of Parliamentary and Legislative Studies
Emma Crewe
Parliamentary Affairs
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"Property and Power: MPs’ Assets and Support for Democratization in the 1867 UK Reform Act"
Laura Bronner
Legislative Studies Quarterly
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When to Go Local, When to Go National: Determinants of Private Members' Legislation In the 38th and 39th Parliaments
Royce Koop
2009
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The Institutional Representation of Parliament
Cristina Leston-Bandeira
Political Studies, 2017
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The government’s approach to reforming the House of Lords is 80 per cent of the way there. Nick Clegg needs to take courage and to go the rest of the way to a more democratic and coherent, wholly elected Senate.
Patrick Dunleavy
2011
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Parliament: A Few Headaches and a Dose of Modernisation
Philip Cowley
Parliamentary Affairs, 2001
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A Tragedy of the House of Commons
Kenneth McKenzie
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