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
The UK media data measures the policy content of the front page of The Times of London. Front page news stories are sampled on the Wednesday of each week between 1960 and 2008, with the headlines blind-coded by two researchers according to major topic code, generating a database of 21,854 front page headlines. Due to important changes in the formatting of The Times during period between 1960 and 2008, along with a strike that stopped production for almost a year we strongly suggest that those interested in the media data refer to the dataset codebook.
21854 observations spanning the years 1960 to 2008
download dataset
download codebook
Parliamentary & Legislative
-
Acts of Parliament
The short and long titles of Acts of the UK Parliament were blind-coded by two researchers; assigning a major topic code and sub-topic code to each piece of legislation. This procedure led to eighty-five percent inter-coder reliability for major topics. The remaining differences were resolved through discussion by the project leaders.
6169 observations spanning the years 1911 to 2015
download dataset
download codebook
-
Prime Minister's Questions
Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs) was first introduced in 1961 and has become a weekly centrepiece of British political life. Our data contrains questions from 1997 to 2008 that were blind-coded by two researchers; assigning a major topic and sub-topic code to each question. These are coded based on the question asked and not the answer given hence their place alongside other parliamentary datasets.
9062 observations spanning the years 1997 to 2008
download dataset
download codebook
-
Scottish Bills
The short and long titles of Bills of the Scottish Parliament were blind-coded by two researchers; assigning a majortopic and subtopic code to each. This procedure led to eighty-five percent inter-coder reliability for major topics. The remaining differences were resolved through discussion by the project leaders.
161 observations spanning the years 1999 to 2008
download dataset
download codebook
-
Scottish Hearings
A short description of the content and purpose of Hearings of the Scottish Parliament were blind-coded by two researchers; assigning a majortopic and subtopic code to each. This procedure led to eighty-five percent inter-coder reliability for major topics. The remaining differences were resolved through discussion by the project leaders.
273 observations spanning the years 1999 to 2007
download dataset
download codebook
-
Scottish Statutory Instruments
This was gathered by Shaun Bevan. It contains all Scottish statutory instruments from 1999 to 2014 coded according to the Comparative Agendas Project based on their subject.
Please cite the following article when using this data:
Bevan, Shaun. “Devolution is Secondary: What Drives Scottish Secondary Legislation?” Public Administration, forthcoming, 2021. (DOI: 10.1111/padm.12694).
4201 observations spanning the years 1999 to 2014
download dataset
download codebook
-
UK Statutory Instruments
This dataset was gathered by Shaun Bevan with the support of the Mannheim Centre of European Social Research (MZES), University of Mannheim. It contains all national level UK statutory instruments from 1987 to 2008 coded according to the Comparative Agendas Project based on their subject. The data is a pilot of the project "Bureaucratic Agendas: The Responsiveness of Secondary Legislation in a Comparative Perspective" that is currently being developed (see http://sbevan.com/projects--data.html).
Please cite the following article when using this data:
Bevan, Shaun. 2015. “Bureaucratic Responsiveness: The Effects of Government, Public and European Attention on the UK Bureaucracy.” Public Administration, 93(1): 139-158. (doi: 10.1111/padm.12113).
37786 observations spanning the years 1987 to 2008
download dataset
download codebook
Prime Minister & Executive
-
Speeches From The Throne
The Speech from the Throne, the King’s or the Queen’s Speech, sets out executive and legislative priorities of British government in the forthcoming session of parliament. The full text of the speech is coded at the ‘quasi-sentence’ level (a quasi-sentence constitutes an expression of a single policy idea or issue). Transcripts of the speech were blind-coded by two researchers who compared and reconciled their responses; first to ascertain whether each quasi-sentence contained any policy content and then to assign a major topic and sub-topic code to each quasi-sentence. This procedure led to ninety per cent inter-coder reliability for major topics for most years. The coders resolved remaining differences through discussion and project leaders made the final decision in the few cases where coders could not agree.
6624 observations spanning the years 1911 to 2012
download dataset
download codebook
Political Parties
-
Party Manifestos
The creation of the UK Party Manifestos data was led by Caterina Froio for 1983-2010. Christoffer Green-Pedersen and Henrik Seeberg led on the 2015 data. Complete details of these efforts as well as the codebook and notes from both periods is included at the end of the variable codebook.
36293 observations spanning the years 1983 to 2015
download dataset
download codebook
Budget
-
UK Budgetary Expenditure
Budgetary data between 1910 and 2007 is compiled using a combination of the UK Blue Book on Government Expenditure and expenditure data reported in Alan T. Peacock and Jack Wiseman (1961, Princeton University Press) The Growth of Public Expenditure in the United Kingdom.* Budget data from 1951 to 2007 was taken directly from the UK Blue Book on government expenditure recoded to match the policy agendas coding system. Each Blue Book contains several years of data updated to account for inaccuracies and additional expenditures not initially included upon first publication. To obtain a time series of the annual expenditure of British government from 1950 to 2007, data from the Blue Book for 1962, 1971, 1980, 1989, 1997, 2002 and 2008 were used. For more information about working with budget data, generally, there is a page with resources.
1368 observations spanning the years 1910 to 2007
download dataset
download codebook
Public Opinion & Interest Groups
-
Gallup's "Most Important Problem"
This dataset contains responses to Gallup UK's survey question about the "Most Important Problem" aggregated at the annual level and coded by major topic. Contact us for monthly or quarterly MIP data if needed.
1007 observations spanning the years 1946 to 2001
download dataset
download codebook
-
Ipsos-MORI's "Most Important Issue"
This dataset contains responses to Ipsos-MORI's survey question about the "Most Important Issue" aggregated at the annual level and coded by major topic. Contact us for monthly or quarterly MII data if needed.
741 observations spanning the years 1977 to 2015
download dataset
download codebook
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