The United Kingdom constitution – a mapping exercise
A briefing paper which "maps" (or summarises) the main elements of the United Kingdom's uncodified constitution.

UK Youth Parliament briefing 2016 (1 MB , PDF)
On 11 November 2016 the House of Commons chamber will host the annual sitting of the UK Youth Parliament.
The UK Youth Parliament’s sitting in the House of Commons marks the start of Parliament Week – an annual, a programme of events and activities that connects people with the UK Parliament.
What is the UK Youth Parliament?
The UK Youth Parliament provides opportunities for 11-18 year olds to use their elected voice to bring about social change through meaningful representation and campaigning. The UK Youth Parliament has over 280 seats for elected MYPs all aged 11-18.
MYPs are usually elected in annual youth elections throughout the UK. Any young person aged 11-18 can stand or vote. In the past two years one million young people have voted in UK Youth Parliament elections.
Once elected, MYPs organise events and projects, run campaigns and influence decision makers on the issues which matter most to young people. All MYPs have the opportunity to meet once a year at the UK Youth Parliament Annual Sitting.
What will the MYPs discuss?
Each year MYPs present the issues they were elected to campaign on. Those already in the manifesto are filtered out and others covering similar content are combined.
The final list of manifesto policy motions goes forward to the online MYP vote to prioritise the issues they would like most to be debated at the Annual Sitting. This year the Annual Sitting was held in July at the University of York.
Manifesto motions are voted on at the Annual Sitting with speeches for each motion and an open floor debate. The top ten issues are prioritised and go forward to a national consultation though the Make Your Mark ballot with a target to reach 1 million in 2016.
Make your Mark ballot 2016
The following issues were on the Make you Mark ballot paper and voting ran from 12 August to 2 October.
The five issues to be debated
The five top issues from the ballot will be debated in the House of Commons, where MYPs vote for the two issues to be campaigned on during the following year. The results of the Make your Mark ballot will be released on Friday 7 October, 2016.
UK Youth Parliament briefing 2016 (1 MB , PDF)
A briefing paper which "maps" (or summarises) the main elements of the United Kingdom's uncodified constitution.
An updated briefing paper on oaths of allegiance taken by senior office holders in the UK. This includes the Parliamentary Oath taken by MPs and peers and the judicial oath taken by judges.
Short Money is allocated to opposition parties to support them in their parliamentary duties. Allocations are based on a party’s performance at the previous election.