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ARK hosts 'Is the UK stronger or weaker after 20 years of devolution' at Queen's

To mark the 20th anniversary of ARK the seminar 'Is the UK stronger or weaker after 20 years of devolution' recently (19 February) took place at Queen’s University.

ARK 20
Pictured (L-R) are: Dr Paula Devine, Co-Director of ARK and Queen’s University Belfast; Professor Paul Carmichael, Ulster University; Dr Katy Hayward, Queen’s University Belfast; Professor Sir John Curtice, University of Strathclyde; Emma Vardy, Chair and BBC Ireland Correspondent; Professor Richard English, Queen’s University Belfast; and Professor Ann Marie Gray, Co-Director of ARK and Ulster University.

ARK is Northern Ireland’s social policy hub and a joint project between Queen’s University Belfast and Ulster University, established in 2000.

The guest speakers were Professor Sir John Curtice, from the University of Strathclyde, and Dr Katy Hayward, from the School of Social Sciences, Education and Social Work at Queen’s University Belfast. The event will be chaired by BBC Ireland Correspondent, Emma Vardy.

During the seminar, Professor Curtice discussed how the constitutional preferences and sense of national identity of people living in England, Scotland and Wales have evolved since the advent of devolution in 1999, and whether this suggests the last 20 years have witnessed a strengthening or a weakening of the foundations upon which the devolution settlement now rests. Dr Hayward explored the changing patterns of devolution and identity in Northern Ireland during this time.

For more information on ARK, please visit: https://www.ark.ac.uk/ARK/

Featured Expert
Photo: Professor Katy Hayward
Professor of Political Sociology and Fellow at the Senator George J. Mitchell Institute for Global Peace, Security and Justice
School of Social Sciences, Education and Social Work (SSESW)
Media

Media inquiries to Zara McBrearty at Queen's Communications Office on Tel: (028) 9097 3259 or email z.mcbrearty@qub.ac.uk

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