Article

How to conceptualise energy law and policy for an interdisciplinary audience: The case of post-Brexit UK

Details

Citation

Cairney P, McHarg A, McEwen N & Turner K (2019) How to conceptualise energy law and policy for an interdisciplinary audience: The case of post-Brexit UK. Energy Policy, 129, pp. 459-466. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enpol.2019.02.022

Abstract
Interdisciplinary energy research is essential. It advances our understanding of potential transitions from high to low carbon energy systems. However, it is easier to propose than deliver. It requires translation into a simpler language, to aid communication, but not at the expense of the conceptual language that drives our understanding of complex energy systems. We combine legal, political science, and policy studies to show how to balance the need to communicate accessibly and recognise legal and policymaking complexity. We begin with a statement so accepted in legal studies that it has become a truism: the law in the books is not the same as the law in action. The allocation of legal competences is only one influence on policymaking in a complex system. We describe three key ways to conceptualise this relationship between law, policy, and energy systems, focusing on the: (1) ‘on paper’ legal separation of powers between different governments, (2) interaction between law and policy in practice, including blurry boundaries between formal responsibility and informal influence, and (3) role of law as one of many contributors to policymaking. We use these approaches to explain the implications of Brexit for UK energy policy.

Keywords
Energy law and policy; multi-level policymaking; energy systems; complex systems; UK; Scotland; Brexit;

Journal
Energy Policy: Volume 129

StatusPublished
FundersUK Energy Research Centre
Publication date30/06/2019
Publication date online22/02/2019
Date accepted by journal07/02/2019
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/28946
ISSN0301-4215

People (1)

People

Professor Paul Cairney

Professor Paul Cairney

Professor, Politics