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Part front matter for Part Three Permeable Boundaries
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Published:February 2012
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If the walls of Parliament had been made more permeable by the flow of information from inside the chambers to the countryside at large, then so too were the boundaries porous to those members of the public who had business in the chambers and committee rooms or who simply wanted to witness the political nation at work. Although contemporary writers on Parliament as well as its membership often professed to the need to keep the speeches and decisions made in the chambers secret from those who haunted the rooms and corridors of Westminster Palace, in reality strict confidentiality was a measure enforced only during times of political crisis. Just as the torrent of parliamentary writings flowed out of the chambers in newsletters, separates, and journals, so too paper increasingly poured in during the 1620s. The transmission of information between Parliament and the people was not just paper traffic, however; it was also the coming and going of a diverse array of persons with business in Parliament. Lobbyists and petitioners, in particular, stalked the environs to distribute their wares and speak to members of Parliament and peers. Parliament functioned in the immediate vicinity of nonmembers and might be clearly observed by those who walked through the Palace of Westminster.1Close
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