IN THIS LESSON
The UK is unusual in not having a single written constitution. Instead, its rules are spread across laws, court judgments, conventions, and traditions. In this lesson you’ll discover what the constitution really is, where its authority comes from, and how it shapes daily life. You’ll also see why it is called a “living” constitution that can evolve over time, and the strengths and weaknesses of such a flexible system.
Build a clear, practical understanding of UK politics with this beginner-friendly course. Through engaging lessons, real-world examples, quizzes, and reflection exercises, you’ll learn how the system works, how ideas shape debate, and how to think more critically about elections, media, and public life. Ideal for beginners, students, first-time voters, and anyone who wants a stronger foundation before exploring political psychology.
Core Lesson
The UK Constitution is sometimes described as “unwritten,” but that phrase is misleading. It is not written in one place, but it is written down across many sources. Think of it less like a single book, and more like an entire library of rules and precedents.
Sources of the Constitution
Statute Law
Acts of Parliament are the clearest and most important source of constitutional authority. For example, the Human Rights Act 1998 or the Parliament Acts of 1911 and 1949 shape how government and citizens interact.Common Law
Court judgments create principles that become part of the constitution. Judges interpret how laws should apply, and those interpretations influence future decisions.Conventions
These are unwritten practices that politicians follow because they are accepted traditions. For instance, the Prime Minister is always a member of the House of Commons, not the House of Lords. This is not written into law, but it is followed because it has become an accepted rule of the game.Works of Authority
Some respected texts act as guides. The most famous is Erskine May: Parliamentary Practice, which sets out how Parliament is expected to function.European and International Law
While Brexit changed the role of EU law, international treaties and agreements still influence the UK’s legal and constitutional framework.
Why “Unwritten” Matters
Because the UK Constitution is not contained in a single document, it is often described as “flexible.” This means it can evolve without the need for a grand rewrite. Parliament can pass a new law that changes how the constitution works, and once that law is in force, it becomes part of the framework.
For example, the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 attempted to change the way elections were called. A decade later, it was repealed, and the power to dissolve Parliament returned to the Prime Minister. This shows both the strength and the fragility of the UK system. On one hand, it allows rapid adaptation. On the other, it raises questions about stability and long-term clarity.
Everyday Impact
The constitution might sound abstract, but it shapes daily life. When a government decides how long it can stay in power, what rights you have to free speech, or how laws are made, it is the constitution that provides the rules. Even though you will never see it bound in one document, you experience its effects whenever you vote, read the news, or challenge authority.
The Unwritten Constitution FAQ
Constitutional Quiz
Test your knowledge on the sources and key principles of the UK's constitution.
There are 5 questions in this quiz. Good luck!
Quiz (Question 1 of 5)
Quiz Results 🏆
Round-Up
The UK Constitution is not a single written document, but a patchwork of laws, conventions, and traditions. This gives it flexibility, but also creates uncertainty compared to rigid constitutions elsewhere. Understanding this “unwritten but living” system is the first step to making sense of how the UK is governed. In the next lesson, we will explore how Parliament itself functions, and how these constitutional principles play out in practice.