A Very British National Security State: Formal and informal institutions in the design of UK security policy

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Abstract

What are the roles of government institutions in the design and implementation of effective national security policy? Using the case of post-2010 reform to Britain’s central government security policy machinery, we find that formal institutions can help the informal strategy-making institutions on their periphery to function better. Through interviews with 25 senior officials, we find that Britain’s National Security Council and quinquennial Strategic Defence and Security Reviews – both instituted in 2010 with the intention of improving UK security policymaking – remain limited as formal makers of national strategy. But the networks of individuals and ideas they support, by absolving some decision-makers of audience costs while immersing others in creative yet coherent strategy-development communities, have improved the overall quality of UK security policymaking compared to its pre-2010 condition. This finding also carries implications for other contexts and thus represents a promising avenue for future research. (Final version accepted 20 June 2018.).

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Thomson, C. P., & Blagden, D. (2018). A Very British National Security State: Formal and informal institutions in the design of UK security policy. British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 20(3), 573–593. https://doi.org/10.1177/1369148118784722

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