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ID103547
Title ProperScrutiny in English local government and the role of councillors
LanguageENG
AuthorCoulson, Andrew
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Overview and Scrutiny Committees were introduced in England and Wales in the Local Government Act 2000 that ended the role the full council and its committees as the locus of decision-making for most local authorities. Overview and scrutiny committees composed of councillors not on small decision-making executives were tasked with holding these to account. The performance of scrutiny committees is variable. Generally they work best where they concentrate on reviews of policy and practice, with recommendations following from well-researched reports. The paper reviews the difficulties which arise when scrutiny committees endeavour to hold powerful executives to account, and suggests that to strengthen this new legislation is required, in particular to institutionalise scrutiny committees as agencies of the full council, the representative body for the area, comparable to the way in which the select committees at Westminster are the agencies of the Parliament.
`In' analytical NotePolitical Quarterly Vol. 82, No. 1; Jan-Mar 2011: p.102-111
Journal SourcePolitical Quarterly Vol. 82, No. 1; Jan-Mar 2011: p.102-111
Key WordsScrutiny ;  Select Committees ;  Local Government ;  Holding to Account ;  Party Groups ;  Policy Review