Lord James Douglas-Hamilton
July 31, 1942 -Summary information for Lord James Douglas-Hamilton
Contributions
1981
2 speeches — St. Lucia and Dominica Independence Gifts Commons February 6, 1981
Education (Scotland) Commons October 21, 1981
Debate on the Address Commons November 4, 1981
Hostel Accommodation Written Answers November 23, 1981
Deceased Persons (Estates) Written Answers November 23, 1981
Combat Aircraft Written Answers November 23, 1981
Alcohol, Drug and Solvent Abuse Written Answers November 30, 1981
Alcohol, Drug and Solvent Abuse Written Answers November 30, 1981
Alcohol, Drug and Solvent Abuse Written Answers November 30, 1981
4 speeches — Alcohol, Drugs and Solvent Abuse Written Answers November 30, 1981
Alcohol, Drug and Solvent Abuse Written Answers November 30, 1981
Alcohol, Drug and Solvent Abuse Written Answers December 1, 1981
5 speeches — Local Government and Planning (Scotland) Bill Commons December 7, 1981
Greece (NATO Membership) Written Answers December 8, 1981
Unemployed Persons (Bothwell) Commons December 9, 1981
Local Government Finance Commons December 9, 1981
Court Cases (Backlog) Written Answers December 9, 1981
Investment Written Answers December 9, 1981
4 speeches — Scottish Special Housing Association Commons December 15, 1981
Housing Support Grant Written Answers December 15, 1981
Local Government Expenditure Written Answers December 15, 1981
Oil-related Industries Written Answers December 16, 1981
Regional Preferential Assistance Written Answers December 16, 1981
Manufacturing Industry (Inter-regional Movement) Written Answers December 16, 1981
Average Gross Weekly Earnings Written Answers December 16, 1981
Unemployment Statistics Written Answers December 16, 1981
Public Expenditure Written Answers December 16, 1981
Gross Domestic Product Written Answers December 16, 1981
Rate Support Grant Written Answers December 18, 1981
Hunter Report Written Answers December 18, 1981
Public Expenditure Written Answers December 21, 1981
Information presented on this page was prepared from the XML source files, together with information from the History of Parliament Trust, the work of Leigh Rayment and public sources. The means by which names are recognised means that errors may remain in the data presented.