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CANS: Wales and Scotland. Richard Wyn Jones Wales Governance Centre Cardiff University. Context. Only W & S – no funding for England / English region i.e. no data on what we know least about Problematic in terms of thinking about solidarity etc.
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CANS: Wales and Scotland Richard Wyn Jones Wales Governance Centre Cardiff University
Context • Only W & S – no funding for England / English region • i.e. no data on what we know least about • Problematic in terms of thinking about solidarity etc. • Thus far, we have done little analysis – enough to satisfy funder in W! • Simple (simplistic?) overview of key themes
Agenda • Multi-level voting • Support for ‘regionalisation’ • Identification with / perceived significance of various scales • Competencies • The devolution paradox • Territorial solidarity
Identities & Perceived Significance of Scale • Despite significant differences (demographic etc.) ‘nested’ identities norm in W & S • Neighbourhood and the two ‘national’ levels stand out in terms of attachment • Local Authority and the two ‘national’ levels stand out in terms of perceived importance • Of the two ‘national’layers, ‘regional’ level viewed in significantly more positive light than ‘state’ level.
“X doesn’t care much what people like me think”, % Agree Strongly and Agree
Location of Policy Competences? • In W & S public attitudes seem to mirror perceptions of the prevailing division of responsibilities...
The Devolution Paradox... • On the one hand, electorate supportive of devolution and want more of it. They also seem to be supportive of individual examples of policy divergence... • However, on the other hand the electorate remains hostile to policy divergence (at the state level) per se.
Territorial Solidarity • Note limitations of data here... • Wales is poor • Perceptions of Scotland mixed • No data on a donor region • Nonetheless, strong sense of solidarity in evidence in W & S