Two grids on the same template. The first is empty - print it, fill in each cell with a one-line note while you revise. The second is a worked example to check yourself against.
Each cell asks one question: does this row strengthen the column quality (mark +) or weaken it (mark -)? Then add a one-line note saying why. The plus and minus columns are deliberately not pre-printed - your judgement is the work.
| Settlement / event+ - | Real power transferred | Democratic mandate | Policy divergence | Strengthened the Union | Stable settlement | Asymmetry deepened | Westminster sovereignty intact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scotland (1998-2016) |
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| Wales (1998-2017) |
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| Northern Ireland (1998) |
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| England | |||||||
| Scottish referendum (2014) |
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| Internal Market Act (2020) |
| Settlement / event+ - | Real power transferred | Democratic mandate | Policy divergence | Strengthened the Union | Stable settlement | Asymmetry deepened | Westminster sovereignty intact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scotland (1998-2016) |
+Primary law-making across health, education and justice plus full income tax rates and bands (Scotland Acts 1998-2016). | +74% Yes in the 1997 referendum; Holyrood elected by AMS. | +Free university tuition and minimum unit alcohol pricing - visibly different from England. | -Gave the SNP a national platform; independence came within ten points in 2014. | +Expanded by statute three times; the 2016 Act made the Parliament permanent in statute. | +The deepest settlement - more powers than Wales or Northern Ireland. | +The Internal Market Act 2020 was passed over Holyrood's objection - the override is real. |
| Wales (1998-2017) |
+From secondary powers (1998) to a reserved-powers parliament (Wales Act 2017) with income tax powers since 2019. | -Only 50.3% Yes on a 50% turnout in 1997 - the weakest founding mandate; repaired by 63% Yes in 2011. | +Free prescriptions and a distinct path in health and education. | +The consent story - the settlement grew by referendum, and no Welsh independence majority has followed. | +Steady expansion 1998, 2011, 2017; the Senedd grows to 96 members from 2026. | +Caught up with Scotland's model (reserved powers) but not its scope. | +Westminster still writes the reserved list. |
| Northern Ireland (1998) |
+Primary powers in health, education and justice - inside a mandatory power-sharing executive. | +The Good Friday Agreement 1998 was approved by referendum on both sides of the border. | -Divergence is limited by collapse - the institutions spent years suspended. | -Power-sharing manages the constitutional dispute rather than settling it; the post-Brexit Irish Sea border strained it further. | -Suspended 2002-07, 2017-20 and 2022-24. | +A settlement unlike any other - cross-community consent rules built in. | +Westminster legislated directly during suspensions. |
| England | -No English parliament; metro mayors hold budgets, not law-making power. | -The 2004 North East referendum rejected a regional assembly by 78%. | -English policy is UK government policy - no separate English voice. | -The English Question and funding resentment are the Union's unsolved problem. | -The one experiment, English Votes for English Laws (2015), was abolished in 2021. | +Around 84% of the UK population has no devolved legislature - the asymmetry at its sharpest. | +English laws are made directly by the sovereign UK Parliament. |
| Scottish referendum (2014) |
+Led directly to the Smith Commission and the Scotland Act 2016 transfers. | +85% turnout - the strongest democratic exercise in modern UK history. | -Not a policy event. | +55% No kept the Union - though 45% Yes normalised independence as a live option. | -Billed as once in a generation; independence demands returned within years. | +Pushed Scotland further ahead of the other settlements via the 2016 Act. | +Westminster authorised the vote (Edinburgh Agreement 2012) - it happened on Westminster's terms. |
| Internal Market Act (2020) |
-Constrains devolved regulation through mutual-recognition rules. | -Passed over the objection of all three devolved legislatures. | -Limits practical divergence in goods and services. | -Treated by the devolved governments as a Westminster power grab. | -Reopened a settlement Brexit had already strained. | -Applies uniformly, cutting across all three settlements. | +The clearest modern proof that Westminster can legislate over devolved objection. |