Devolution, the transfer of political and legal powers from central government to the constitute countries of the UK, was originally intended to respond to demands for more local autonomy in the decision making process regarding how certain policies were decided and run by each respective region. However, instead of pacifying demands for more self-government, devolution has had the effect of loosening the threads that once bound the UK together as a single political entity; especially with regards to Scotland. There is now no going back, and confronting the challenges of maintaining a United Kingdom are beginning to strain the union in ways never anticipated.
Alan George Milne (Fri,) studied this question.
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