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British Official Publications. Library and Technical Information PDF

335 Pages·1973·15.707 MB·English
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British Official Publications SECOND R E V I S ED EDITION JOHN E.PEMBERTON B.A., F.L.A. Librarian, University College at Buckingham PE R G A M ON PRESS Oxford • New York Toronto · Sydney Pergamon Press Ltd., Headington Hill Hall, Oxford Pergamon Press Inc., Maxwell House, Fairview Park, Elmsford, New York 10523 Pergamon of Canada Ltd., 207 Queen's Quay West, Toronto 1 Pergamon Press (Aust.) Pty. Ltd., 19a Boundary Street, Rushcutters Bay, N.S.W. 2011. Australia Copyright © 1973 John E. Ptemberton All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, wit/tout the prior permission of Pergamon Press Ltd. First edition 1971 Second revised edition 1973 Reprinted 1974 Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Pemberton, John Ĺ British offícial publications. (Library and technical information) 1. Great Britain - Government publications - BibUography. I. TiÜe. Z2009.P45 1973 015'.42 73-16231 ISBN 0-08-017797-2 Printed in Great Britain by Biddies Ltd.. Guildford, Surrey To My Mother and Father List of Illustrations UNLESS otherwise stated, the illustrations are reproduced by kind per­ mission of the Controller of Her Majesty's Stationery Office. FIG. 1. Roll of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal 6 FIG 2. House of Commons Alphabetical List of Members 10 FIG. 3. Daily List of Government Publications 20 FIG. 4. Monthly Catalogue of Government Publications 22 FIG. 5. A nnual Catalogue of Government Publications 24 FIG. 6. Sectional List 27 FIG 7. Sessional Index 29 FIG. 8. General Alphabetical Index 1950 to 1958-59 30 FIG. 9, Hansard's Catalogue and Breviate of Parliamentary Papers 1696- 33 1834. (By kind permission of Basil BlackweU and Mott Ltd.) FIG. 10. Ford, P. and Ford, G., Breviate of Parliamentary Papers 1940-1954. 35 (By kind permission of Basil BlackweU and Mott Ltd.) FIG. 11. Ford, P. and Ford, G., Select List of British Parliamentary Papers 36 1833-1899. (By kind permission of Basil BlackweU and Mott Ltd.) FIG. 12. Morgan, A. Mary, British Government Publications: an index to 39 chairmen and authors 1941-1966. (By kind permission of the Library Association.) FIG. 13. Division List 45 FIG. 14. Journals of the House of Commons: General Index 1950-51 to 47 1959-60 FIG. 15. General Index to Treaty Series 1961-1964: General Treaties 67 FIG. 16, Index of British Treaties 1101-1968 68 FIG 17. OrderPaper of the House of Commons 90 FIG. 18. Public Bill List 93 xi xii LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS FIG. 19. Houseof Lords Minutes of Proceedings FIG. 20. Return Relating to Public Bills FIG. 21. List of Private Bills ^'^ FIG. 22. House of Commons Debates (Hansard): General Index 1^ FIG. 23. Royal Assent Act 1967 FIG. 24. Manchester Corporation Act 1967 FIG. 25. Public General Acts and Measures: Effect of Legislation 127 FIG. 26. Public General Acts and Measures: Index 128 FIG. 27. Index to the Statutes 134 FIG. 28. Chronological Table of the Statutes 138 FIG. 29. Index to Local and Personal Acts 1801ş947 142 FIG. 3 0. The Local and Personal A cts (Annual catalogue) 144 FIG. 31. Statutory Instruments (Annual catalogue): Numerical List 151 FIG. 32. Statutory Instruments (Annual catalogue): Classified List of Local 152 Instruments FIG. 3 3. Monthly List of Statutory Instruments 154 FIG. 34. British Imperial Calendar and Ovil Service List 234 FIG. 35. Diplomatic Service List 238 HG. 36. Scientific Research in British Universities and Colleges 247 FIG. 37. Annual Abstract of Statistics 251 Preface to the Second Edition For this second edition the text has been revised and updated to take account both of institutional changes, such as the replacement of the National Assembly of the Church of England by the General Synod and the creation of new administrative tribunals like the Value Added Tax Tribunals, and of major new works such as M. F. Bond's Guide to the Records of Parliament and India: the Transfer of Power, The lists of Royal Commissions, Departmental Committees, Working Parties and Tribunals of Inquiry have been extended to 1972. So too have the various series of publications, for example Studies in Official Statistics and Public Record Office Handbooks, The guides to further reading which occur throughout the text have similarly been revised as regards new editions and augmented as regards significant new works which have been published in the inter­ vening period. Recent developments have also necessitated the replace­ ment of several facsimile reproductions of specimen pages from key refer­ ence publications. An entirely new chapter on non-H.M.S.O. publications has been added, since this important body of literature is increasing in volume and presents parricular problems of access. At the same time the chapter on official publications relating to science, technology and medicine has been deleted, with patents being taken into the new chapter and other materials being covered elsewhere. My indebtedness to numerous government departments, and in par­ ticular to Her Majesty's Stationery Office, continues to increase. I cannot recall an occasion when the response to my requests for information has not been both courteous and extremely efficient. I also wish to thank Mrs Yvonne Hancock, Statistics Librarian of the University of Warwick, for her Xiv PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION valuable comments on the statistics chapter, and to Mrs. Elizabeth Anker, British Official Publications Librarian at Warwick, for considerable bibUo- graphical assistance during the course of this revision. Buckingham John Ĺ. Pemberton. September, 1973 CHAPTER 1 British Parliamentary Government THE CONSTITUTION There is no single document which contains the text of the British Constitution. It is embodied in the statute law and the records of judicial decisions, and in accepted custom and tradition of which written evidence must be sought in a variety of offícial and quasi-offícial publications. The actual scope of constitutional law cannot be stated in precise terms; certainly there is an undisputed hard core of essential topics - rule of law, separation of powers, parliamentary supremacy, and so forth - but, as an examination of the texbooks clearly reveals, the borders of the subject are ill defined. F. W. Maitland said that "the demarcation of the province of constitutional law is with us a matter of inconvenience" {Con­ stitutional History, 1908), and the distinguished constitutional lawyer A. V. Dicey felt obliged to explain in his standard treatise The Law of the Constitution (1885), that "before commenting on the law of constitution [the English commentator or lecturer] must make up his mind what is the nature and extent of English constitutional law". Unmistakably, the traditionalist view of constitutional law, which has been restricted to the consideration of statute law and judicial decisions, is now giving way to a new and wider interpretation under the impetus of Geoffrey Wilson's Cases and Materials on Constitutional and Adminis­ trative law (1966). According to Wilson, "unless ... the use of materials other than law reports and decided cases [is] taken for granted, it is impossible to present constitutional law as a coherent subject or relate it in a meaningful way to the functions it has to fulfil or the social and political context in which it has to operate". His collection of materials represents the nearest approach that has yet been made to a written statement of the British Constitution. It draws not only upon statutes and law reports but 2 BRITISH OFFICIAL PUBLICAΉONS also upon such documents as White Papers; the reports of Royal Com­ missions, Select Committees and Inquiries; Official Reports of Debates in the House of Lords and the House of Commons; and even Answers to Parliamentary Questions. The significance of Wilson's work to those who wish to become in­ formed on all facets of the British Constitution is that they must acquaint themselves with a considerably wider range of official materials than has hitherto been regarded as sufficient - and all of these sources are des­ cribed in the present volume. As reliable texts on constitutional law the following can be recommended: BAGEHOT, W., The English Constitution (rev. edn. 1873, etc.). DICEY, A. v., Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Con­ stitution {\Oth Edn. 1959). JENNINGS, Sir IVOR, The British Constitution (5th edn. 1966). MAITLAND, F. W., Constitutional History of England (1908). MITCHELL, J. D. B., Constitutional Law (2nd edn. 1968). PHILLIPS, 0. HOOD, Constitutional and Administrative Law (4th edn. 1967). WADE, E. C. S. and PHILLIPS, G. G., Constitutional Law (8th edn. 1970). WILSON, GEOFFREY, Cases and Materials on Constitutional and Administrative Law (1966). Notwithstanding the varying interpretations of the limits of their sub­ ject^ all these works agree that the fundamental principle of the British Constitution is the supremacy of Parliament in the making of laws. SUPREMACY OF PARLIAMENT The Pariiament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland consists of the Sovereign, the House of Lords and the House of Commons - each having its own rights and privileges. Together, these three elements constitute the legislature which can legislate for the whole of the United Kingdom, for any part of it or any combination of its parts. It can also legislate for the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands, though these are Crown dependencies and not part of the United Kingdom. BRITISH PARLIAMENTARY GOVERNMENT 3 Under the terms of the Parliament Act, 1911, the Ufe of a Parliament is five years, though it may be dissolved before the full term has expired. The period is divided into sessions, each normally lasting for a year and running from November to October. This accounts for the fact that certain categories of Parliamentary Papers which will be described later are known as Sessional Papers. Unlike the legislative assemblies of those countries which have written constitutions, the British Parliament is not subject to any legal restraints. During its life each assembly can legislate on any matter without hind­ rance. An official pamphlet on Tlte British Parliament (Central Office of Information, HAl.S.O., new edn. 1971) describes its position as follows: ... [I]t can make and unmake any law whatsoever; it can legalise past illegalities and make void and punishable what was lawful when done, and thus reverse the decisions of the ordinaiy law courts; it can destroy the most firmly established convention or turn a convention into binding law; and it has power to prolong its own life beyond the normal period of five years without con­ sulting the electorate. Having thus described the extent of Pariiament's sovereignty, how­ ever, it goes on to add that In practice, Pariiament does not assert its supremacy in this way. Its mem­ bers bear in mind the common law which has grown up in Britain througji the centuries, and they act as far as possible in accordance with precedent and tradition. Moreover, both Houses are sensitive to public opinion and although the validity of an Act of Pariiament that has been duly passed, legally promul­ gated and published by the proper authority cannot be disputed in the law courts, no Parliament would be likely to pass an Act which it knew would receive no public support. The system of party government in Britain ensures that Parliament legislates with its responsibility to the electorate in mind. POWERS OF THE CROWN In the British Constitution the Monarchy has no direct authority; its powers are exercised by the Sovereign on the advice of her Ministers or by those Ministers in the Sovereign's name, and the device employed for carrying them into effect is known as the royal prerogative. There are in fact several prerogatives, the two principal being the personal and the political. The latter is the means whereby Parliament is summoned, pro­ rogued and dissolved; by which Ministers, archbishops and bishops are appointed and peers created. In practice, these activities are performed through the issuance of instruments such as Orders in Council, warrants.

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