The government has refused to publish its sector-by-sector analyses of the impact of Brexit, arguing that releasing them they would undermine its negotiating position. Molly Scott Cato (MEP for the South West) says businesspeople trying to plan for the future have a right to know what the likely effects of leaving the EU will be. It was, I thought, a fairly ..
Conflicts surrounding the development of public lands are on the rise around the world. In the Unite...
Territorial governance in the UK has taken the form of ‘Schrodinger’s devolution’, where the devolve...
Brexit had been falsely presented in 2016 as either economically positive or at worst economically n...
With the second Brexit analysis leak, Michael Ellington and Costas Milas write that it is in no one'...
By October ministers hope to have negotiated a withdrawal agreement on the terms of the UK's departu...
It is increasingly clear that Brexit has cost not saved money, encumbered not liberated trade, inhib...
Michael Kenny and Jack Sheldon write that, although May's government has been prepared to make vario...
Simon Wren-Lewis reflects on the collapse of the construction firm Carillion and on the problems tha...
The Netherlands’ highest court has ruled that COVID-hit businesses should be able to claim rent disc...
The furore over a Tory MP sending a letter to all university vice chancellors asking for the names o...
Contrary to some predictions, Britain's economy has not crashed in the two years since the EU refere...
The Brexit vote represented a key moment for European integration. Sascha O. Becker, Thiemo Fetzer, ...
Britain's recent General Election and its unanticipated outcome marks the latest chapter in the poli...
Arianna Giovannini and Amreen Qureshi highlight the gap that exists between levelling up rhetoric an...
Through its insistence on leaving the EU, the May government has created an immense, administrative ...
Conflicts surrounding the development of public lands are on the rise around the world. In the Unite...
Territorial governance in the UK has taken the form of ‘Schrodinger’s devolution’, where the devolve...
Brexit had been falsely presented in 2016 as either economically positive or at worst economically n...
With the second Brexit analysis leak, Michael Ellington and Costas Milas write that it is in no one'...
By October ministers hope to have negotiated a withdrawal agreement on the terms of the UK's departu...
It is increasingly clear that Brexit has cost not saved money, encumbered not liberated trade, inhib...
Michael Kenny and Jack Sheldon write that, although May's government has been prepared to make vario...
Simon Wren-Lewis reflects on the collapse of the construction firm Carillion and on the problems tha...
The Netherlands’ highest court has ruled that COVID-hit businesses should be able to claim rent disc...
The furore over a Tory MP sending a letter to all university vice chancellors asking for the names o...
Contrary to some predictions, Britain's economy has not crashed in the two years since the EU refere...
The Brexit vote represented a key moment for European integration. Sascha O. Becker, Thiemo Fetzer, ...
Britain's recent General Election and its unanticipated outcome marks the latest chapter in the poli...
Arianna Giovannini and Amreen Qureshi highlight the gap that exists between levelling up rhetoric an...
Through its insistence on leaving the EU, the May government has created an immense, administrative ...
Conflicts surrounding the development of public lands are on the rise around the world. In the Unite...
Territorial governance in the UK has taken the form of ‘Schrodinger’s devolution’, where the devolve...
Brexit had been falsely presented in 2016 as either economically positive or at worst economically n...