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- Who Governs Merseyside: Results of the Public Vote
- Who Governs Merseyside? Event and Briefing Paper
- Corporate and Financial Dominance in Britain’s Democracy
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- AV Referendum Briefing
- AV Talk at Al-Ghazali Centre
- Democratic Audit & Federal Trust Debate on Electoral Reform
- DA's Director appears before select committee
- Funding Political Parties in Great Britain: a Pathway to Reform
- Democratic Audit study for BBC Newsnight
- Democracy is Dead, Long Live Democracy
- New book on the power of the British Prime Minister
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- How should 'political England' be recognised?
- The Feltham and Heston by-election: more of the same
- Select committee report shows way forward on voter registration
- Who governs Merseyside? The significance of Heseltine's new report
- Who governs? An analysis of 1,101 governing roles on Merseyside
- What say will voters have in redrawing of the electoral map?
- What is the UK constitution made of? Exposing the 'hidden wiring'
- Party funding reform: Canadian experience suggests a negotiated settlement is essential
- Britain is - still - less violent and lawless than it was 15 years ago
- Police, politics and the media - the risks of elected police commissioners
- Fixing the Revolving Door
- Reforming the constitution: process matters
- Police reform: why democracy is not just about elections
- Talking sense on Lords reform: why the PSA’s new Briefing fills a crucial gap
- The Inverclyde by-election: business as usual for Scottish voters
- Who monitors external appointments to government departmental boards?
- The EU Bill is flawed, but could it open up other options for democratic reform?
- It does matter who provides public services, especially when things go wrong
- The asylum amnesty ‘scandal’: mind the gap
- Reports of Parliament’s decline much exaggerated
- What would be the constitutional consequences of Lords reform?
- Do referendums ever resolve constitutional debates?
- Postal voting and electoral fraud
- Are public school boys still running Britain?
- What’s happening to our democracy?
- Votes for prisoners: Still a reform too far?
- Reduce and equalise? Why electoral geography matters
- Localism: the new politics of old
- Do the public really want to change ‘the system'?
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Democracy is Dead, Long Live Democracy
Dr Stuart Wilks Heeg (Director of Democratic Audit) has written an essay entitled Democracy is Dead, Long Live Democracy, as part of a series of twenty essays exploring the future of the public and not-for-profit sectors over the next ten years
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