The UK constitution is unusual: uncodified, flexible, and resting on the sovereignty of Parliament. This walk-through sets out what it is and where it comes from, then takes the two debates that dominate the exam - should it be codified, and has parliamentary sovereignty survived - before mapping the reforms since 1997 and the cases that move the argument.
Hold one distinction throughout: the difference between what is legally true and what is true in practice. In strict law Parliament has never stopped being sovereign; in practice devolution, rights law and the courts have all constrained it. Most of the exam turns on that gap.
The UK constitution is uncodified: there is no single document. It is drawn from several sources:
Because it is uncodified, the UK constitution has grown document by document over eight centuries rather than being written at a single moment. The exam expects the milestones, and the running theme is the transfer of power.
| Document | What it did and why it matters |
|---|---|
| Magna Carta 1215 | Barons forced King John to accept that the monarch is not above the law and cannot tax or punish at will - the first real limit on royal power and the root of due process. The starting point of the constitution. |
| Bill of Rights 1689 | After the Glorious Revolution, established that the Crown cannot rule without Parliament: regular parliaments, free elections, free speech in Parliament, and no taxing or suspending laws without consent. The foundation of parliamentary sovereignty - statute stands above the Crown. |
| Act of Settlement 1701 | Secured a Protestant succession and confirmed that Parliament, not the Crown, decides who reigns; it also strengthened judicial independence by protecting judges' tenure. |
| Acts of Union 1707 | Merged the English and Scottish parliaments into a single Parliament of Great Britain at Westminster - the origin of the unitary state. |
| Parliament Acts 1911 and 1949 | After the Lords blocked the 1909 People's Budget, the 1911 Act removed the Lords' veto over money bills and capped its delay of other bills at two years; the 1949 Act cut that to one. Established the primacy of the elected Commons. |
| European Communities Act 1972 | Took the UK into the EEC and gave EU law priority over UK statute (seen in Factortame, 1990) - a major qualification of sovereignty while the UK was a member. |
| EU (Withdrawal Agreement) Act 2020 | Implemented Brexit: the UK left the EU on 31 January 2020 and the European Communities Act was repealed, ending EU-law supremacy and restoring the supremacy of statute. |
Parliamentary sovereignty is the doctrine that Parliament is the supreme legal authority. Dicey set out three rules:
The doctrine has been tested. Factortame (1990) saw the courts suspend part of the Merchant Shipping Act 1988 because it conflicted with EU law - a real legal limit while the UK was a member. Devolution, the Human Rights Act, the growing use of referendums and a more active Supreme Court have all been read as challenges to it.
| Reform | What it did | Verdict |
|---|---|---|
| Devolution (1998 on) | Created the Scottish Parliament, Senedd and NI Assembly. | Dispersed power and improved democracy, but left the English question unresolved and is not complete. |
| Human Rights Act 1998 | Incorporated the ECHR into UK law; courts can declare statutes incompatible. | Strengthened rights, but as ordinary statute it is not entrenched. |
| Lords reform 1999 and 2024 | Removed most hereditary peers in 1999; the 2024 Bill removes the remaining hereditaries. | Improved legitimacy but left the chamber unelected - reform unfinished. |
| Constitutional Reform Act 2005 | Created the UK Supreme Court (opened 2009) and reformed the Lord Chancellor's role. | Improved the separation of powers - one of the more complete reforms. |
| Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 (repealed 2022) | Set five-year fixed terms; repealed in 2022, returning dissolution to the prerogative. | Its repeal shows how easily constitutional change is undone without entrenchment. |
| 2024 Labour programme | Hereditary peers removal and further proposed reform. | Continues the unfinished agenda; dispersed power further but rights largely untouched. |
| Case or Act | What it established |
|---|---|
| Factortame (1990) | The courts suspended part of an Act because it breached EU law - a real legal limit on sovereignty while the UK was an EU member, ended by Brexit. |
| Human Rights Act 1998 | Brought ECHR rights into UK courts; courts can issue declarations of incompatibility (Belmarsh, 2004). Ordinary statute, so repealable. |
| Constitutional Reform Act 2005 | Created the UK Supreme Court and reformed the Lord Chancellor - a clearer separation of powers. |
| Miller 1 (2017) | The government needed Parliament's authority to trigger Article 50 - the executive cannot use the prerogative to remove statutory rights. |
| Miller 2 / Cherry (2019) | The 2019 prorogation of Parliament was unlawful - the courts limiting the executive's use of the prerogative. |
| Safety of Rwanda Act 2024 | Legislated that Rwanda is a safe country, showing the reach of a sovereign Parliament with a Commons majority. |
An uncodified constitution adapts through ordinary legislation: the Human Rights Act brought a whole rights framework home with a single Act, and devolution was created by statute, where the United States has amended its document on a substantive issue only rarely since 1971. The cost is clarity - the rules sit across scattered statutes, cases and conventions. Interim judgement: for a polity that has changed as fast as the UK since 1997, flexibility is worth more than tidiness.
Codification would transfer interpretive power from elected MPs to unelected judges reading the document. Against that, a government with a Commons majority can currently reshape the constitution almost at will - the Safety of Rwanda Act 2024 legislated a fact about a country, and the repeal of the Fixed-term Parliaments Act handed dissolution back to the executive. Interim judgement: democratic control favours the present system, but the lack of any higher-law check on the executive is the reformers' strongest ground.
The system has produced stable government and protected rights in practice without a written text - the Belmarsh declaration of incompatibility in 2004, Miller 2 limiting prorogation in 2019. Yet the Human Rights Act is only ordinary statute, repealable by the next majority, and reform since 1997 is largely unentrenched and unfinished. Interim judgement: the constitution works, but rights protection is fragile in a way codification would fix.
Judgement. The case against a fully codified constitution holds: flexibility and democratic accountability are real strengths, and there is neither agreement on what a written document would contain nor evidence the present system has failed. But the reformers are right that rights and the limits on executive power rest on nothing more than an ordinary majority. The strongest reform is targeted - entrenching rights - rather than a wholesale codified constitution.