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72 N. Ir. Legal Q. 62 (2021)
Towards a Welsh Health Law: Devolution Divergence and Values

handle is hein.journals/nilq72 and id is 494 raw text is: Northern Ireland
Legal Quarterly
COVID-19 Supplement Vol. 72 No. Sl (2021) 62-90                     w
Article DOI: 10.53386/nilq.v72iS1.940
Towards a Welsh health law: devolution,
divergence and values
John Harrington, Barbara Hughes Moore and Erin Thomas1
Cardiff University
Correspondence email: harringtonj3@cardiff.ac.uk
ABSTRACT
COVID-19 and Brexit have given political impetus to re-examine
Wales's place within the United Kingdom's devolution settlement.
Health has been a key site for divergence in law and policy as
between the administrations in Cardiff and London. In light of these
contests, and the longer-running trends in devolution, this article
considers whether a distinct 'Welsh' health law has now emerged.
We examine the constitutional context and the range of sources for
this new legal field. We argue that a set of values can be identified
through an attentive reading of the legislative output of the Welsh
Parliament, through reflection on the policy development of health in
Wales, through the devolution process. While accepting that these are
varied and heterogeneous, these values are as much an expression of
universal ethical goals as they are of any delineable Welsh essence.
No mere summation of positive law, these values allow one to define
a distinctive realm of Welsh health law, have the potential to act as
an interpretative lens for analysing law and policy flowing from
Westminster, and could potentially act as a value structure for further
Welsh legislation.
Keywords: devolution; divergence; values; Welsh jurisdiction;
COVID-19; health law; healthcare; Coronavirus Act 2020; NHS; Brexit.
INTRODUCTION
The health landscape of Wales and the United Kingdom (UK) is
changing. Pre-existing tensions and divisions over Brexit and
wider constitutional issues of devolution and governance have been
illuminated and exacerbated by COVID-19.2 At the onset of the
pandemic, the Welsh, Scottish and Northern Irish administrations and
the UK Government, for England, committed to respond in a closely
1   Respectively Professor of Global Health Law, Lecturer in Law and ESRC Doctoral
Researcher, School of Law and Politics, Cardiff University. We are indebted to
Matt Watkins for detailed comments on earlier drafts. Thanks also to Abbie-Rose
Hampton, Huw Pritchard and Charlie Sinden. The usual disclaimer applies. Research
for this article was made possible by a Welsh Government Ser Cymru award.
2   J Bradbury, 'Welsh devolution and the union: reform debates after Brexit' (2021)
92 Political Quarterly 125; G Evans 'Devolution and Covid-19: towards a new
normal in the Territorial Constitution?' (2021) (1) Public Law 19-27.

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