Parliaments and Post-Legislative Scrutiny

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assessment of law effectiveness in governance
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Cross-border Mergers
Deliberative Law Making
Departmental Select Committees
EPRS
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EU Member States
European parliament
Ex-ante Impact Assessment
Ex-post Evaluation
ex-post legislative review
Governmental Ordinances
Implementation Report
Independent Scrutinisers
INSLM
Law Commission
law implementation analysis
Legislation
Legislative cycle
legislative evaluation
legislative process research
Legislative Scrutiny
Parliamentary Engagement
Parliamentary Involvement
parliamentary oversight
Pensions Committee
PLS
Policy Cycle
policy impact assessment
Post-legislative scrutiny
Pre-legislative Consultations
Public Engagement
Regulatory Impact Assessments
Sunset Clauses
Supreme Audit Institutions
UK Law Commission
UK Parliament
UK's Exit
UK’s Exit

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367677565
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Dec 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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To what extent have parliaments a responsibility to monitor how laws are implemented as intended and have the expected impact? Is the practice of Post-Legislative Scrutiny emerging as a new dimension within the oversight role of parliament? What approach do parliaments apply in assessing the implementation and impact of legislation? These are the fascinating questions guiding this book.

Case studies offer an in-depth look at how particular countries and the European Union conduct Post-Legislative Scrutiny. The analysis puts Post-Legislative Scrutiny in the context of parliamentary oversight and parliaments’ engagement in the legislative cycle.

The purpose of this book is to demonstrate the value of Post-Legislative Scrutiny as a public good, benefiting the executive, legislature and the people in ensuring that law delivers what is expected of it, as well as to respond to the need for greater clarity as to what is meant by the term. In this way, the publication can assist legislatures to think more clearly as to what precisely they understand, and seek to achieve, by Post-Legislative Scrutiny.

This book is the result of the co-operation between the Centre for Legislative Studies at the University of Hull and the Westminster Foundation for Democracy. The chapters were originally published as a special issue of The Journal of Legislative Studies.

Franklin De Vrieze is Senior Governance Adviser at the Technical Advisory Unit of the Westminster Foundation for Democracy in London, UK.

Philip Norton is Professor of Government at the University of Hull, UK, and sits in the UK House of Lords as Lord Norton of Louth. He was the first chair of the House of Lords Constitution Committee.