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Online project of Open University and BBC Online explores various aspects of the House of Lords, its function, history, conflicts with the Commons and plans for reform.
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Alphabetical guide to explain the workings of the House of Commons and the House of Lords.
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Guide to every MP offers search by surname, region or cabinet job.
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The United Kingdom Houses of Parliament educational website. Aimed at, and especially suitable for, children.
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Presents individual profiles for members of Parliament with biographies, jobs and committees, voting records and contact information.
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An alphabetical index to the Home Pages of individual Select Committees of the House of Commons.
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View the five most recently published debates from the floor of the Commons.
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Full schedule for the week.
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Site contains the transcripts of the UK House of Lords debates. Full text from June 1996 to present available. The site is updated with the previous day's edition by 08:00.
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View uncorrected transcripts of debates from the floor of the Lords.
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Provides information on the business of the House and a facility for Peers to sign up to speak in debates.
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Links to homepages and email addresses of British MPs.
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Live webcasts of proceedings from the UK Parliament comprising video feeds from The House of Commons, The House of Lords, Westminster Hall and an audio feed of Select Committee hearings.
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Subscription service providing bibliographic indexing of all UK parliamentary information, including links to full text documents.
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Provides links to Hansard speeches and written answers, organised by date, topic or MP. Allows users to add comments and links to individual speeches.
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Portal to host online consultations on behalf of Parliamentary Select Committees.
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Official directory of Bills from both the House of Commons and the House of Lords, with links to full text, explanatory notes and amendments for each.
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UK legislation, including Acts of Parliament, Statutory Instruments and Measures of the General Synod of the Church of England. From the Office of Public Sector Information.
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Composed of the House of Commons, elected by single-member plurality for a period of not more than five years, and the appointed (and for a few members inherited) House of Lords.