Scottish Electoral Wards
Local government in Scotland comprises 32 unitary local authorities (council areas), which are divided into wards for electoral purposes. There are currently a total of 1,227 councilors elected from 354 wards - with each ward returning 3 or 4 councilors. The Local Government Boundary Commission for Scotland is responsible for recommendations on the definition of ward boundaries, however, the definitive dataset is delineated by Ordnance Survey for inclusion in their BoundaryLine product.
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Citation proposal
. Scottish Electoral Wards. https://services.mspdata.eu:/geonetwork/srv/api/records/f17baa94-1e55-4656-9f7b-ead496609220 |
Simple
- Alternate title
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Multi-member Wards
- Alternate title
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MMW
- Date ( Creation )
- 1994-11-11
- Date ( Revision )
- 2019-04-01
- Identifier
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OS_BL_ScottishElectoralWards
Originator
Thistle House, 91 Haymarket Terrace
Edinburgh
Scotland
EH12 5HD
United Kingdom
Distributor
- Maintenance and update frequency
- asNeeded As needed
- GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0 ( Theme )
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Administrative units
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- Keywords ( Theme )
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Local government
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- Access constraints
- otherRestrictions Other restrictions
- Other constraints
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No limitations on public access
- Use limitation
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The following attribution statement must be used to acknowledge the source of the information: Contains Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database right (insert year)
- Spatial representation type
- vector Vector
- Denominator
- 10000
- Metadata language
- eng English
- Character set
- utf8 UTF8
- Topic category
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- Boundaries
- Geographic identifier
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GB-SCT
- Date ( Publication )
- 2007-12-13
- Supplemental Information
- Reference system identifier
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EPSG
/OSGB 1936 / British National Grid (EPSG:27700)
/7.9
- Distribution format
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ESRI Shapefile
(1.0
)
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- OnLine resource
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OS OpenData Supply
Download via OS OpenData
- Hierarchy level
- dataset Dataset
Conformance result
- Date ( Publication )
- 2010-10-23
- Explanation
- Pass
- false
- Statement
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The Local Government Boundary Commission for Scotland is responsible for reviewing and making recommendations to Scottish Ministers for local authority boundaries and electoral arrangements in Scotland. Electoral reviews make recommendations on the overall number of councillors in each local authority and number of councillors in each ward (each ward must elect either 3 or 4 councillors); the number of wards for local government elections and their boundaries; and the extent of council areas. Electoral reviews are undertaken roughly every 8 to 12 years. Recommendations that are accepted by Ministers are enacted by statutory instrument and passed to Ordnance Survey for inclusion in their BoundaryLine product.
Following the reorganisation of councils into the 32 unitary local authorities, 1,245 electoral boundaries were defined following direction from the Secretary of State in accordance with Schedule 2 of the Local Government etc (Scotland) Act 1994. Since then, a number of formal reviews of electoral arrangements and administrative areas have taken place. A summary of the reviews and their impact on electoral ward boundaries is as follows:
3rd Statutory Review of Electoral Arrangements:
• First review following the introduction of 32 local authorities, resulting in 1,222 wards
4th Statutory Review of Electoral Arrangements:
• Resulted in the introduction of 353 multi-member wards
Effective 2002-06-01 (SSI 2002/155-157):
• Argyll and Bute and West Dunbartonshire at Ardoch Sewage Works
• Aberdeen City and Aberdeenshire at Blackburn
• Glasgow City and Renfrewshire at Braehead
• City of Edinburgh and West Lothian at West Farm, Broxburn
Effective 2010-04-01 (SSI 2009/368, 442):
• Glasgow City and North Lanarkshire at Cardowan, by Stepps
• Angus and Dundee City at Fithiebank
Effective 2011-04-01 (SSI 2010/353):
• East Dunbartonshire and Glasgow City at Princes Gate and Greenacres, by Robroyston
Effective 2012/05/03 (SSI 2011/332):
• West Lothian at Bathgate
5th Statutory Review of Electoral Arrangements:
• Amendments to wards in 25 of the 32 local authorities (no amendments to Argyll and Bute, Dundee City, Scottish Borders, Orkney, Shetland and Na h-Eileanan an Iar)
Effective 2018-02-02 (SSI 2017/430):
• Keltybridge and Fife Envirnonmental Energy Park at Westfield
Effective 2019-04-01 (SSI 2018/308):
• Glasgow City and North Lanarkshire at Cardowan, by Stepps
With regards to the seaward extent of boundaries, this normally ends at the low water mark. In a small number of cases, a local government area has been extended by legislation around a port or harbour into the surrounding sea beyond the low water mark. The largest of these is Yell Sound in the Shetland Islands, and there are also substantial extensions at Aberdeen and Greenock.
Metadata
- File identifier
- f17baa94-1e55-4656-9f7b-ead496609220 XML
- Metadata language
- eng English
- Character set
- utf8 UTF8
- Hierarchy level
- dataset Dataset
- Date stamp
- 2019-04-03
- Metadata standard name
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ISO 19115:2003/19139
- Metadata standard version
-
1.0
Point of contact
Thistle House, 91 Haymarket Terrace
Edinburgh
Scotland
EH12 5HD
United Kingdom
Metadata catalogue