…which is possibly at the heart of our current condition of constitutional soul searching. If we had a second chance, would we not simply recognise the sovereignty of the different…
Part Four: A Sovereign Wales in an Isle-wide Confederation
…their member nation, initially, and to the centre next. A Committee of Member Nations which comprises the First Ministers of the individual territories and the Prime Minister of the Council…
Part Three: A Sovereign Wales in an Isle-wide Confederation
…a new constitutional framework which improves arrangements for self-government—through emphasising common respect for human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, and rule of law—within an isle-wide civic societal structure typified by pluralism,…
Part Two: A Sovereign Wales in an Isle-wide Confederation
…Committee of Member Nations (comprising the Council’s Prime Minister and Minister for Isle-wide Affairs, and the First Minister of each member nation), convenes regularly to discuss more general considerations which…
Part One: A Sovereign Wales in an Isle-wide Confederation
…and costs associated with fragmenting previously held joint functions, noting that competitive considerations between member nations inevitably complicate relationships in the context of a confederation. Two of the more pressing…
Wales: A Bioeconomic Future?
…chemical and biological methods to firstly separate out the components of interest, and then make the products that we need. For example, we can extract nutrient-rich juice from grass and…
Why We Shouldn’t Go Back To Normal
…that the world’s ten richest men have seen their combined wealth increase by $540 billion (£400 billion) during the pandemic; enough to both pay for a Covid-19 vaccine for everyone…
New Members Join IWA Editorial Group
…responsible for commissioning content for the publications will be bolstered by activist and researcher Yasmin Begum, strategic communications executive Theo Davies-Lewis, writer and psychotherapeutic counsellor Grace Quantock, as well as…
Belonging to ‘Y Cymry’
…to show one of the greatest problems inherent to communities: as communities bring people together, they also divide. National communities like Y Cymry are especially dangerous in this regard. In…