Hodder Education
UK Politics Annual Update 2022
UK Politics Annual Update 2022
US$ 16.79
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This UK Politics Annual Update will help students:

- Review all the developments relevant to A-level specifications in UK politics from the last year, with examples linked closely to specification points, strong links between topics and focused suggestions for further reading
- Develop their confidence with expert analysis they can draw on throughout their course and in the exams
- Enhance their knowledge of the news to build a bank of up-to-date examples linked to the specifications, helping them to develop persuasive arguments for their essays
- Learn more about the government's response to the COVID-19 pandemic and other up-to-date political developments, and how to put them into context
- Use our updated exam skills feature to clarify how to use the information they have just learned in their exam

UK Politics Annual Update 2022 chapters:
1. Pressure groups: Lobbying in the 2020s - methods and controversies
2. Rights in context: Campaigns to protect liberties and to extend the franchise
3. Political Parties: Old, new or in between? What does Keir Starmer's Labour Party stand for?
4. The constitution: The Johnsonian constitution 'in flux'
5. Devolution (Part 1): See no EVEL: what is the future for English representation in Westminster?
6. Devolution (Part 2): What does the government's 'levelling up' agenda mean for devolved government in England?
7. Parliament and the executive: The changing relationship between Parliament and the executive
8. The House of Lords: Peers in the 2020s: The composition and legislative influence of the House of Lords
9. The UK Supreme Court: Redefining judicial power in the 2020s

Language
English
ISBN
9781398361195
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Chapter 1 Pressure groups: lobbying in the 2020s — methods and controversies
Greensill Capital: when lobbying hit the headlines
The Owen Paterson case: parliamentary standards and ‘Tory sleaze’
Should UK lobbying rules be reformed?
Chapter 2 Rights in context: campaigns to protect liberties and to extend the franchise
Case study 1: The Electoral Reform Society and voter ID
Case study 2: Liberty and vaccine passports
Case study 3: the3million and local voting rights for EU citizens
Chapter 3 Political parties (Part 1): what does Keir Starmer’s Labour Party stand for?
What has happened to the Labour Party?
Labour under Starmer: objectives and achievements
Chapter 4 Political parties (Part 2): are the Tories under Boris Johnson really ‘one-nation conservatives’?
What is one-nation conservatism?
What does one-nation conservatism mean in the 2020s?
Chapter 5 The constitution: the Johnsonian constitution ‘in flux’
Why is the UK constitution described as being ‘in flux’?
What has been the impact of recent constitutional change?
Chapter 6 Devolution (Part 1): what is the future for English representation in Westminster?
What happened to ‘English votes for English laws’?
Why was EVEL abolished?
Post-EVEL: what does the future hold for English representation in Westminster?
Chapter 7 Devolution (Part 2): what does the government’s ‘levelling up’ agenda mean for devolved government in England?
Will the government’s ‘levelling up’ agenda revive plans for regional government in England?
Why doesn’t England have a national parliament?
Chapter 8 Parliament and the executive: the changing relationship between parliament and the executive in the 2020s
Sixty years of Prime Minister’s Questions
Pandemic and post-Brexit select committee activity
Backbench pressure on the government
Chapter 9 The House of Lords: the role and impact of peers in the 2020s
Selecting the Lords: the election of hereditary peers
The legislative influence of the House of Lords
Chapter 10 The UK Supreme Court: redefining judicial power in the 2020s
To what extent have judges become too politically powerful?
What is judicial review and why is it so controversial?
How and why is the government seeking to curb judicial power?

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