Part I: Governmental Organisation
1: Composition of the Government
2: Ministerial Offices
Part II: Into Government
3: Preparing for Office
4: Ministerial Qualifications
5: Taking Office
Part III: In Government
6: Ministers Pay and Benefits
7: Conflicts of Interest
8: Ministers in their Departments
9: Ministers and Government Decisions
Part IV: Government and Law
10: Ministers and The Law
11: Ministers and Legislation
12: Ministers' Prerogative Powers
13: Ministers in Court
Part V: Ministers and Parliament
14: Communicating with Parliament
15: Responsibility to Parliament
Part VI: Out of Government
16: Leaving Government
17: After Office
Appendices:
Questions of Procedure for Ministers
Ministerial Committees
Professor Rodney Brazier is Professor of Law at the University of Manchester
'Rodney Brazier has achieved considerable success in bringing to
bear the perspective of a constitutional lawyer in considering our
forms of government...There is no question about the high standards
of accuracy observed throughout the book..The value of the first
edition is that it offers a lucid and scholarly description and
anlysis of the position of Ministers of the Crown prior to general
election in May 1997...There is no-one better qualified to
select
both the topics and the emphasis. He has written a scholarly,
perceptive and constructive addition to the literature of
constitutional law.' The Cambridge Law Journal 1997
'Professor Rodney Brazier's latest work is a marvellous storehouse
of information about the rules that govern the lives and times of
ministers. Nothing like it has appeared since Sir Ivor Jenning's
"Cabinet Government"....The ministerial life cycle is here minutely
examined.'
'Few, if any, recent texts on constitutional practice and law could
be considered interesting, readable and comprehensive. This volume
is undoubtedly the exception, and cannot be too highly recommended.
It covers virtually every aspect of ministerial life in some depth,
and in a manner which manages to be not only explanatory but also
enlightening...Not only does Professor Brazier achieve a high
degree of comprehensiveness, but every topic which is covered
in
this book is illustrated by historical or contemporary examples,
making it a really invaluable reference work. Impeccably resourced
and referenced through copious footnotes, the text nevertheless
manages to remain readable - concise and illuminating rather than
dense and verbose. It seems unlikely that any other academic will
attempt to better this volume for some time to come. No-one working
in politics could fail to learn something new and useful from
reading this excellent text.' Conor Mcgrath in The Parliamentary
Monitor January 1998
'A book that describes and analyses the rule under which they
operate is a welcome addition to the literature already available.
'Ministers of the Crown' aims to provide "everything that anyone
would want to know about the constitutional position of members of
Government" and it succeeds...an excellent reference book and, for
anyone interested in the detail of government, it is a book to dip
into and enjoy..It contains a wealth of information, is
meticulously
researched and footnoted,and is peppered with examples and
illustrations which prevent what might be potentially tedious
material from becoming dull. It is difficult to find shortcomings
in the book.'
Diana Woodhouse in Public Law 1997
'The book offers a deep treasure trove of factual information.
Matters of fairly common Knowledge are reprised succintly and
coherently.'
'This book is an important and substantial examination of Britain's
governmental engine-room...It is massively factual and sensibly
laid out with the appropriate references given as footnotes on each
page...One particular value of the book is that it prints in full,
and uses as a major source, that very strange document "Questions
of Procedure for Minsiters"..The book is full of much detail, all
of it accurate.'
`'Brazier is thoroughly at home among constitutional minutiae, his
understanding butressed by knowledge of mountains of
precedents...Ministers of the Crown will become an authoritative
work of reference...an important work of reference in the
unfashionable field of constitutional law. It will be of great
value to all those seeking to get to grips with our untidy
constitution.''
The Times Higher Education Supplement
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