Whither the centre? Tracing centralisation and fragmentation in UK politics
Whither the centre? Tracing centralisation and fragmentation in UK politics
This article explores the question of how to conceptualise the location, capacity and effectiveness of the ‘centre’ in the UK policymaking process. While the literature on UK governance has historically featured avid disagreements about the power and capacity of central government, we identify a more recent convergence around the idea that the UK government is characterised by persistent centralisation of decision making alongside a fragmentation of policy delivery and frontline capacity. Through a detailed review of UK governance debates, we trace the development of two, seemingly contradictory, schools of thought: the centralisation school and the fragmentation school. We then identify an emerging consensus which recognises a continuous and uneven centripetal–centrifugal dynamic and the concurrence of both centralisation and fragmentation. We contend that changes to the British political context following the 2016 European Union referendum buttress the claim that UK politics is shaped by twin processes of centralisation and fragmentation, reinforcing tensions between a centre that desires power and a range of forces eroding its capacity to deliver. Our overall contention is that the notion of ‘power without capacity’ effectively captures the contemporary character of the ‘centre’.
centralisation, fragmentation, metagovernance, multi-level governance, UK politics
Ward, Joseph
18411518-2ae4-47bb-9944-f853658e8196
Ward, Bradley
335d276e-caaf-4f83-9191-d031f5bb759b
Kerr, Peter
e3a4062a-5809-4978-85d9-cde27a8425df
Ward, Joseph
18411518-2ae4-47bb-9944-f853658e8196
Ward, Bradley
335d276e-caaf-4f83-9191-d031f5bb759b
Kerr, Peter
e3a4062a-5809-4978-85d9-cde27a8425df
Ward, Joseph, Ward, Bradley and Kerr, Peter
(2024)
Whither the centre? Tracing centralisation and fragmentation in UK politics.
Political Studies Review.
(doi:10.1177/14789299241258629).
Abstract
This article explores the question of how to conceptualise the location, capacity and effectiveness of the ‘centre’ in the UK policymaking process. While the literature on UK governance has historically featured avid disagreements about the power and capacity of central government, we identify a more recent convergence around the idea that the UK government is characterised by persistent centralisation of decision making alongside a fragmentation of policy delivery and frontline capacity. Through a detailed review of UK governance debates, we trace the development of two, seemingly contradictory, schools of thought: the centralisation school and the fragmentation school. We then identify an emerging consensus which recognises a continuous and uneven centripetal–centrifugal dynamic and the concurrence of both centralisation and fragmentation. We contend that changes to the British political context following the 2016 European Union referendum buttress the claim that UK politics is shaped by twin processes of centralisation and fragmentation, reinforcing tensions between a centre that desires power and a range of forces eroding its capacity to deliver. Our overall contention is that the notion of ‘power without capacity’ effectively captures the contemporary character of the ‘centre’.
Text
ward-et-al-2024-whither-the-centre-tracing-centralisation-and-fragmentation-in-uk-politics
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 14 May 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 20 June 2024
Keywords:
centralisation, fragmentation, metagovernance, multi-level governance, UK politics
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 492794
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492794
ISSN: 1478-9299
PURE UUID: 0b5c4d93-ecbe-4f60-8b44-15d0649005c1
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 14 Aug 2024 16:36
Last modified: 15 Aug 2024 02:22
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Joseph Ward
Author:
Bradley Ward
Author:
Peter Kerr
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics