Think of London and Brexit and most will think of what it means for 'the City', the heart of the UK's financial services industry. In this, the second in our London Calling Brexit series, Scott James (King's College London) and Lucia Quaglia (University of Bologna) examine why London's financial institutions have failed to wield the influence over Brexit that many might have expected
New research reveals that the pandemic has hit the UK’s poorest regions hardest. Neha Deopa and Pier...
Boris Johnson’s decision to merge the Department for International Development and the Foreign Offic...
The remit of EU institutions has expanded inexorably, writes Jeremy Richardson (Oxford/University of...
London’s strong position as a global city will remain post-pandemic, says Mark Kleinman (King’s Coll...
London has been accused of dominating UK political, economic and cultural life for hundreds of years...
EU law has constrained the City, argues Barnabas Reynolds, a partner at Shearman & Stearling. It has...
The UK has had a long-standing regional house price gap with prices in London much higher than the r...
This paper revisits canonical thinking on international financial centres (IFCs) that understands th...
Theresa May's strategy of procrastination and ambiguity is about to run out, writes Jim Gallagher (U...
This paper was written as an academic provocation for the 'Reflections on The Ring' symposium, and i...
The LSE's Centre for Economic Performance (working with the Centre for Cities think tank) has carrie...
Three main claims made by advocates of ‘Lexit’ – a ‘Left Brexit’ – are that the EU prevents the UK f...
A self-guided alternative heritage trail. Part of the Walking Heritage project, incorporating psycho...
The London Borough of Barnet is one of the five local authority areas selected for the LSE project ‘...
The agreement reached between the UK and the EU in December last year was billed as the final act in...
New research reveals that the pandemic has hit the UK’s poorest regions hardest. Neha Deopa and Pier...
Boris Johnson’s decision to merge the Department for International Development and the Foreign Offic...
The remit of EU institutions has expanded inexorably, writes Jeremy Richardson (Oxford/University of...
London’s strong position as a global city will remain post-pandemic, says Mark Kleinman (King’s Coll...
London has been accused of dominating UK political, economic and cultural life for hundreds of years...
EU law has constrained the City, argues Barnabas Reynolds, a partner at Shearman & Stearling. It has...
The UK has had a long-standing regional house price gap with prices in London much higher than the r...
This paper revisits canonical thinking on international financial centres (IFCs) that understands th...
Theresa May's strategy of procrastination and ambiguity is about to run out, writes Jim Gallagher (U...
This paper was written as an academic provocation for the 'Reflections on The Ring' symposium, and i...
The LSE's Centre for Economic Performance (working with the Centre for Cities think tank) has carrie...
Three main claims made by advocates of ‘Lexit’ – a ‘Left Brexit’ – are that the EU prevents the UK f...
A self-guided alternative heritage trail. Part of the Walking Heritage project, incorporating psycho...
The London Borough of Barnet is one of the five local authority areas selected for the LSE project ‘...
The agreement reached between the UK and the EU in December last year was billed as the final act in...
New research reveals that the pandemic has hit the UK’s poorest regions hardest. Neha Deopa and Pier...
Boris Johnson’s decision to merge the Department for International Development and the Foreign Offic...
The remit of EU institutions has expanded inexorably, writes Jeremy Richardson (Oxford/University of...