Book contents
- The Brexit Challenge for Ireland and the United Kingdom
- The Brexit Challenge for Ireland and the United Kingdom
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- The Constitutional Tensions of Brexit
- Part I Territorial Pressures in Ireland and the United Kingdom
- 1 Subsidiarity, Competence, and the UK Territorial Constitution
- 2 Brexit and the Mechanisms for the Resolution of Conflicts in the Context of Devolution: Do We Need a New Model?
- 3 Beyond Matryoshka Governance in the Twenty-First Century: The Curious Case of Northern Ireland
- 4 Political Parties in Northern Ireland and the Post-Brexit Constitutional Debate
- 5 The Constitutional Significance of the People of Northern Ireland
- 6 The Constitutional Politics of a United Ireland
- 7 The Minority Rights Implications of Irish Unification
- Part II Institutional Pressures and Contested Legitimacy
- Index
1 - Subsidiarity, Competence, and the UK Territorial Constitution
from Part I - Territorial Pressures in Ireland and the United Kingdom
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 August 2021
- The Brexit Challenge for Ireland and the United Kingdom
- The Brexit Challenge for Ireland and the United Kingdom
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- The Constitutional Tensions of Brexit
- Part I Territorial Pressures in Ireland and the United Kingdom
- 1 Subsidiarity, Competence, and the UK Territorial Constitution
- 2 Brexit and the Mechanisms for the Resolution of Conflicts in the Context of Devolution: Do We Need a New Model?
- 3 Beyond Matryoshka Governance in the Twenty-First Century: The Curious Case of Northern Ireland
- 4 Political Parties in Northern Ireland and the Post-Brexit Constitutional Debate
- 5 The Constitutional Significance of the People of Northern Ireland
- 6 The Constitutional Politics of a United Ireland
- 7 The Minority Rights Implications of Irish Unification
- Part II Institutional Pressures and Contested Legitimacy
- Index
Summary
This chapter provides a reassessment of competence allocation and exercise under the UK constitution. It shows how the existing allocation needs to be understood through the prism of EU membership, and supports previously provided by the EU’s governance system. In particular, the EU’s commitment to subsidiarity, under which decisions should be taken at the lowest effective level, and its openness to regional concerns, carved out space for the exercise of devolved competence within a system of cooperative multilevel governance. This is in stark contrast to the near autonomous coexistence of the different governments within the UK nation state. As the UK embarks on the process of leaving the EU, its internal distribution of power is subjected to a recentralisation of competence. Informed by the literature on comparative federalism, it argues that there is a need for an effective domestic replacement for the shared competence space previously provided by the EU’s cooperative federalist system of governance. Powerful challenges have come from an attachment to the model of autonomous coexistence of central and devolved levels of government, reinforced by a resurgent principle of Westminster parliamentary sovereignty. Without an effective commitment to shared governance however, the Union’s future is in serious doubt.
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- The Brexit Challenge for Ireland and the United KingdomConstitutions Under Pressure, pp. 21 - 42Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021