Devolved Matters: Where Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland Make Their Own Law
Areas of law and policy where the Scottish Parliament, Senedd Cymru, and Northern Ireland Assembly have independent legislative competence.
简介
Devolved matters are areas of law and policy on which the devolved legislatures — the Scottish Parliament, the Senedd Cymru (Welsh Parliament), and the Northern Ireland Assembly — can legislate independently of Westminster. Under each devolution settlement, anything not expressly reserved to the UK Parliament is devolved, meaning the devolved body has legislative competence. In practice this covers health, education, housing, justice and policing (in Scotland and Northern Ireland), agriculture, the environment, local government, culture and sport, and aspects of taxation and social welfare. The scope of devolution differs between the three nations: Scotland has the broadest powers (including a largely separate criminal and civil justice system), Northern Ireland has devolved justice and policing, and Wales has an increasingly wide reserved-powers model following the Wales Act 2017. Understanding devolved matters is essential for anyone working in public services, advising on regulatory compliance, or practising law outside England.
与英国法律的主要区别
Health and social care are devolved in all three nations. The NHS in Scotland (NHS Scotland), Wales (NHS Wales), and Northern Ireland (Health and Social Care NI) are entirely separate from NHS England, with their own structures, funding formulae, policies, and legislation.
Education is devolved: Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland each have their own curriculum frameworks, examination systems, and higher education funding regimes. Scottish universities charge no tuition fees to Scottish-domiciled students; Welsh students have a different loan system from England.
Housing law is devolved and has diverged significantly. Wales replaced assured shorthold tenancies with occupation contracts (Renting Homes (Wales) Act 2016). Scotland has its own private residential tenancy regime (Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016).
Justice and policing are devolved in Scotland and Northern Ireland but not in Wales. Scotland has its own court system, prosecution service, prison service, and police force (Police Scotland). Northern Ireland has the PSNI and its own courts. Wales does not have devolved justice.
Agriculture, fishing, forestry, and the environment are devolved in all three nations, leading to separate schemes for farm payments, environmental regulation, and rural development since Brexit.
Local government structure and finance are devolved: council tax discounts, business rates, and local government reorganisation are each handled separately.
Some aspects of taxation are devolved: Scotland can vary income tax rates and bands; Wales and Scotland collect Land Transaction Tax/Land and Buildings Transaction Tax instead of SDLT; Scotland and Wales have devolved landfill taxes.
重要机构
Scottish Parliament (Holyrood)
Passes Acts of the Scottish Parliament on all non-reserved matters. Has been in operation since 1999 following the Scotland Act 1998.
Scottish Government
Executive body responsible for Scottish policy and the introduction of most legislation to the Scottish Parliament.
Senedd Cymru (Welsh Parliament)
Passes Acts of the Senedd on all matters not reserved to Westminster under the Wales Act 2017 reserved-powers model.
Welsh Government (Llywodraeth Cymru)
Executive body for devolved Welsh matters, responsible for policy delivery and secondary legislation in Wales.
Northern Ireland Assembly (Stormont)
Passes Acts on transferred matters including health, education, justice (since 2010), and policing. Subject to power-sharing requirements under the Good Friday Agreement.
Northern Ireland Executive
Multi-party executive responsible for devolved government in Northern Ireland. Has been subject to periods of suspension and collapse.
Police Scotland
Single national police force for Scotland, created in 2013 by merging eight regional forces.
Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI)
Devolved police force for Northern Ireland, established in 2001 under the Good Friday Agreement reforms.
关键法规
Scotland Act 1998 (as amended by Scotland Acts 2012 and 2016)
Government of Wales Act 2006 (as amended by Wales Act 2017)
Northern Ireland Act 1998
Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016
Renting Homes (Wales) Act 2016
重要判例
Agricultural Sector (Wales) Bill Reference
[2014] UKSC 43 — confirmed Senedd's competence to legislate on agricultural wages
AXA General Insurance Ltd v Lord Advocate
[2011] UKSC 46 — judicial review of Acts of the Scottish Parliament
Reference by the Attorney General and Advocate General for Scotland
[2023] UKSC 65 — Scottish Parliament lacked competence to hold independence referendum
Salvesen v Riddell
[2013] UKSC 22 — Scots devolved legislation found incompatible with ECHR
实用注意事项
How to find devolved law
Acts of the Scottish Parliament are available on legislation.gov.uk under 'Scotland' and on the Scottish Parliament website. Acts of the Senedd are on legislation.gov.uk under 'Wales'. Northern Ireland legislation is at legislation.gov.uk under 'Northern Ireland'. Each devolved government also has its own official website.
When E&W law does not apply in Scotland
Scottish law operates on entirely different foundational principles in contract, property, delict (tort), and procedure. English case law is persuasive but not binding in Scotland. Always obtain specialist Scottish legal advice for Scottish matters.
Check the date: devolution is dynamic
The scope of devolved competence has expanded since 1999 and may continue to do so. Always check whether a particular power has been devolved since your last review of the relevant settlement, and check for commencement dates of specific provisions.
Interaction with retained EU law
Following Brexit, EU-derived law became 'retained EU law' in the UK. How this interacts with devolved competence is complex: some retained EU law falls within devolved areas, but the UK Internal Market Act 2020 constrains how devolved bodies can diverge from UK-wide standards.
Barnett formula and funding
Devolved governments are funded largely through block grants from Westminster, calculated using the Barnett formula. This means spending decisions in England affect the size of devolved budgets, creating a form of indirect fiscal linkage even in fully devolved areas.