With the second Brexit analysis leak, Michael Ellington and Costas Milas write that it is in no one's long-term interest to keep such studies from experts until they are complete or leaked. Considering that the task of measuring Brexit's impact is indeed a tall order, they suggest that the process be made more transparent and open to feedback
Michael Kenny and Jack Sheldon write that, although May's government has been prepared to make vario...
The furore over a Tory MP sending a letter to all university vice chancellors asking for the names o...
There is a wealth of academic research published on the European Union, but do EU policymakers actua...
The government has refused to publish its sector-by-sector analyses of the impact of Brexit, arguing...
The recent institutional submissions and conclusion of the first phase of the REF, coupled with the ...
Some of the most widely cited predictions of the economic effects of Brexit rely on flawed analysis,...
Whilst much of the focus on policy impact and knowledge exchange is on what researchers need to do, ...
As governments refocus their attentions from managing COVID-19 to planning for the aftermath and rec...
Farm subsidies will stay at their current levels (presumably without an inflation adjustment) for fi...
Contrary to some predictions, Britain's economy has not crashed in the two years since the EU refere...
Conflicts surrounding the development of public lands are on the rise around the world. In the Unite...
Brexit has given rise to a range of critical issues. For example, was the composition of the elector...
In a report published in late 2017, Piet Eeckhout and Oliver Patel assess the options for a Brexit t...
The worlds of policy and academia are often distant and can be difficult to span. In this post Kathr...
Abby Innes writes that the vote to leave the EU and the administrative chaos around it pull into foc...
Michael Kenny and Jack Sheldon write that, although May's government has been prepared to make vario...
The furore over a Tory MP sending a letter to all university vice chancellors asking for the names o...
There is a wealth of academic research published on the European Union, but do EU policymakers actua...
The government has refused to publish its sector-by-sector analyses of the impact of Brexit, arguing...
The recent institutional submissions and conclusion of the first phase of the REF, coupled with the ...
Some of the most widely cited predictions of the economic effects of Brexit rely on flawed analysis,...
Whilst much of the focus on policy impact and knowledge exchange is on what researchers need to do, ...
As governments refocus their attentions from managing COVID-19 to planning for the aftermath and rec...
Farm subsidies will stay at their current levels (presumably without an inflation adjustment) for fi...
Contrary to some predictions, Britain's economy has not crashed in the two years since the EU refere...
Conflicts surrounding the development of public lands are on the rise around the world. In the Unite...
Brexit has given rise to a range of critical issues. For example, was the composition of the elector...
In a report published in late 2017, Piet Eeckhout and Oliver Patel assess the options for a Brexit t...
The worlds of policy and academia are often distant and can be difficult to span. In this post Kathr...
Abby Innes writes that the vote to leave the EU and the administrative chaos around it pull into foc...
Michael Kenny and Jack Sheldon write that, although May's government has been prepared to make vario...
The furore over a Tory MP sending a letter to all university vice chancellors asking for the names o...
There is a wealth of academic research published on the European Union, but do EU policymakers actua...