Tuesday, January 9, 2018

Essays on the History of Parliamentary Procedure

Just out from Hart Publishing is Essays on the History of Parliamentary Procedure: In Honour of Thomas Erskine May, edited by Paul Evans, who is the Clerk of Committees in the House of Commons in Westminster:
8 February 2015 marked the 200th anniversary of the birth of Thomas Erskine May. May is the most famous of the fifty holders of the office of Clerk of the House of Commons. His continued renown arises from his Treatise upon the Law, Privileges, Proceedings and Usage of Parliament, first published in 1844 and with its 25th edition currently in preparation. It is known throughout those parts of the world that model their constitutional arrangements on Westminster as the 'Bible of Parliamentary Procedure'. This volume celebrates both the man and his book. Bringing together current and former Clerks in the House of Commons and outside experts, the contributors analyse May's profound contribution to the shaping of the modern House of Commons, as it made the transition from the pre-Reform Act House to the modern core of the UK's constitutional democracy in his lifetime. This is perhaps best symbolised by its enforced transition between 1834 and 1851 from a mediaeval slum to the World Heritage Palace of Westminster, which is the most iconic building in the UK.

The book also considers the wider context of parliamentary law and procedure, both before and after May's time. It constitutes the first sustained analysis of the development of parliamentary procedure in over half a century, attempting to situate the reforms in the way the central institution of our democracy conducts itself in the political contexts which drove those changes.
Table of Contents after the jump.
Introduction: The Growth of Many Centuries
Paul Evans

Part I: The Man and his Milieu

1. A Sycophant of Real Ability: The Career of Thomas Erskine May
William McKay

2. Slumber and Success: The House of Commons Library after May
Oonagh Gay

3. Magi or Mandarins?: Contemporary Clerkly Culture
Emma Crewe

Part II: The Book

4. Persuading the House: The Use of the Commons Journals as a Source of Precedent
Martyn Atkins

5. Manuals before May: From the Fourteenth to the Seventeenth Century
David Natzler

6. Parliamentary Law in the Eighteenth Century: From Commonplace to Treatise
Paul Seaward

7. From Manual to Authority: The Life and Times of the Treatise
Paul Evans and Andrej Ninkovic

8. Controversy at the Antipodes (and Elsewhere): The International Cousins of the Treatise
David Natzler, David Bagnall, Jean-Phillipe Brochu and Peter Fowler

Part III: Procedural Development

9. The Principle of Progress: May and Procedural Reform
William McKay

10. May on Money: Supply Proceedings and the Functions of a Legislature
Colin Lee

11. A History of the Standing Orders
Simon Patrick

12. Pursuing the Efficient Despatch of Business: The Role of Committees in Procedural Reform since 1900
Mark Egan

13. Finding Time: Legislative Procedure since May
Jacqy Sharpe and Paul Evans

Part IV: Select Committees

14. Where Did It All Go Right: Developments in Select Committees, 1913–1960
Mark Hutton

15. A Road not Taken: Select Committees and the Estimates, 1880–1904
Colin Lee       

Part V: The Lex Parliamentaria Revisited

16. Privilege: The Unfolding Debate with the Courts
Eve Samson

17. Is the Lex Parliamentaria Really Law?: The House of Commons as a Legal System
David Howarth