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Unequal Plurality: Towards an Asymmetric Power Model of British Politics
180
Citations
14
References
2003
Year
DemocracyPublic PolicyPolitical TheoryCore ExecutivePolitical PluralismDiffuse NatureBritish Political SystemPolitical ProcessSocial SciencesPolitical BehaviorLiberal DemocracyPolitical PowerPolitical PartiesPolitical SystemPolitical ScienceUnequal Plurality
Abstract Until recently, Rhodes's ‘Differentiate Polity Model’ (DPM) has been the most analytically-developed model of the British political system, but it is not without its problems. Here, we argue that the DPM over-stresses the diffuse nature of power in Britain and the extent to which the state has been hollowed out. Instead, we contend that the British political system is more closed and elitist than the DPM acknowledges; rather than being hollowed-out, the state has been reconstituted and the core executive still remains the most powerful actor in the policy process. These themes are reflected in our own ‘Asymmetric Power model’.
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