Datasets

At present, data collected for the project includes:

  • The Speech from the Throne (the Queen’s Speech), 1911-2012.
  • Acts of UK Parliament, 1911-2015.
  • Prime Minister’s Questions, 1997-2008.
  • Front page headlines of The Times of London, 1960-2008.
  • Public expenditure by function of UK government, 1910-2007.
  • Bills of the Scottish Parliament, 1999-2008.
  • Hearings of the Scottish Parliament, 1999-2007.
  • Public opinion about the ‘most important problem facing the country’, 1946-2015.
  • UK Statutory Instruments, 1987-2008.
  • Party Manifestos, 1983-2015.
    Media
  • UK Media: The Times of London
    Parliamentary & Legislative
  • Acts of Parliament
  • Prime Minister's Questions
  • Scottish Bills
  • Scottish Hearings
  • Scottish Statutory Instruments
  • UK Statutory Instruments
    Prime Minister & Executive
  • Speeches From The Throne
    Political Parties
  • Party Manifestos
    Budget
  • UK Budgetary Expenditure
    Public Opinion & Interest Groups
  • Gallup's "Most Important Problem"
  • Ipsos-MORI's "Most Important Issue"

Research

Policy Agendas in British Politics
Our book Policy Agendas in British Politics (Palgrave Macmillan) traces the attention of British government to different policy topics since 1945, showing how issues such as the economy, international affairs, crime and immigration have risen and fallen on the agenda. The ... Read more

 

Party mandates and the politics of attention
An article just published in Party Politics uses data from the UK Policy Agendas Project to test an attention-based model of party mandates and policy agendas. The analysis uses time series cross-sectional models to show how the policy content of the legislative program of ... Read more

 

Representation, Agendas and Institutions
In a recent study, published in the European Journal of Political Research, we use data from the US and UK Policy Agendas Projects to examine the transmission of the priorities of the public onto the policy priorities of government. This reveals how institutions structure the ... Read more

 

Bureaucratic Responsiveness in UK Statutory Instruments
In research recently published in Public Administration, Shaun Bevan investigates what determines the bureaucratic agenda. The study uses data on the policy content and ministry jurisdictions of UK statutory instruments from 1987 to 2008. It finds strong effects of the policy ... Read more

 

Staff

Shaun Bevan
Title: Director
Institution(s): University of Edinburgh

Shaun is Professor of Comparative Public Policy at the University of Edinburgh, an External Fellow at the Mannheim Centre for European Social Research (MZES) at the University of Mannheim and is Director of the Master Codebook for the Comparative Agendas Project in charge of the common Master Codebook and the integration of new projects.. Shaun's research interests include agenda-setting, public policy, interest groups, public opinion, time series analysis, event history analysis, and measurement.


Will Jennings
Title: Assistant Director
Institution(s): University of Southampton

Will Jennings is Professor of Political Science and Public Policy and Director of the Centre for Citizenship, Globalisation and Governance at the University of Southampton. His research is concerned with questions relating to public policy and political behaviour. Will has written extensively on public policy, agenda-setting, public opinion, electoral behaviour, political parties, and the governance of mega-projects and mega-events. 


Peter John
Title: Founding Director
Institution(s): University College London

Peter is Professor of Public Policy at King's College London. He was previously the Hallsworth Chair of Governance at the University of Manchester, where he directed the Institute of Political and Economic Governance. Peter's research is concerned with the use of experiments (RCTs) in public policy, and with questions relating to civic participation and agenda-setting. 


Explore Policy Trends

Click to explore policy trends with United Kingdom pre-selected. The Trends tool allows for policy comparisons across governing institutions and countries.

The UK Policy Agendas Project seeks to develop systematic measures of the policy agenda of British government and politics over time. It applies the policy content coding system of the original Policy Agendas Project in the United States, founded by Frank Baumgartner and Bryan Jones, with the aim of creating a consistent record of the issues that are attended to at different points in time, across many of the main venues of British public policy and politics – namely in parliament, the media and public opinion. The reliability of these measures of policy attention are ensured through adherence to clearly defined coding rules and standards, which give us confidence that changes in the priorities of government can be tracked consistently over time and in different arenas of politics.

Location: University of Edinburgh; University of Southampton
Email: shaun.bevan@gmail.com; shaun.bevan@ed.ac.uk
Downloadable Data Series: 12
Time Span: 1910-2015
Total Observations: 125,539

UK Policy Agendas Project

Featured Research:
Policy Agendas in British Politics

Our book Policy Agendas in British Politics (Palgrave Macmillan) traces the attention of British government to different policy topics since 1945, showing how issues such as the economy, international affairs, crime and immigration have risen and fallen on the agenda. The book throws new light on the key points of change in British politics, such as Thatcherism and New Labour. Building on existing approaches to agenda-setting (incrementalism, the issue attention cycle ... Read more

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