The removal of border-checks and travel restrictions between EU states has been one of the most striking features of European integration. Yet as Jaume Castan Pinos and Steven M. Radil write, European governments quickly adopted tighter border controls as they sought to halt the spread of Covid-19. They argue that while national borders were once thought to be a feature of Europe’s past, the pandemic has underlined just how resilient and meaningful they continue to be
The convoluted saga of Brexit, from the referendum to the final departure of the UK from the EU, has...
Tim Oliver (LSE Ideas) reviews The European Union in Crisis. He writes that this latest contribution...
European integration was once thought of as a largely technocratic process built around consensus, b...
The term ‘vassal state’ has been frequently used by those warning against a post-Brexit relationship...
Public support for the EU rose after the referendum, while Jean-Claude Juncker has painted a starry ...
Following the Netherlands and France, Germany was the third of the original EU members to hold a nat...
The unprecedented fiscal package adopted by the European Council this summer – dubbed Next Generatio...
Several leading European politicians, including French President Emmanuel Macron, have recently spok...
Germany will take over the presidency of the Council of the European Union today. Nele Marianne Ewer...
The agreement reached between the UK and the EU in December last year was billed as the final act in...
This paper analyses the National Populist Challenges to Europe’s Center Right. It assesses the cases...
Russia’s war against Ukraine is not only a challenge to Europe’s territorial borders, writes Kristin...
It is often assumed that if both France and Germany support an EU proposal, it is likely to be imple...
The remit of EU institutions has expanded inexorably, writes Jeremy Richardson (Oxford/University of...
We should remain sceptical of the changes to the UK’s approach to managing migration during the COVI...
The convoluted saga of Brexit, from the referendum to the final departure of the UK from the EU, has...
Tim Oliver (LSE Ideas) reviews The European Union in Crisis. He writes that this latest contribution...
European integration was once thought of as a largely technocratic process built around consensus, b...
The term ‘vassal state’ has been frequently used by those warning against a post-Brexit relationship...
Public support for the EU rose after the referendum, while Jean-Claude Juncker has painted a starry ...
Following the Netherlands and France, Germany was the third of the original EU members to hold a nat...
The unprecedented fiscal package adopted by the European Council this summer – dubbed Next Generatio...
Several leading European politicians, including French President Emmanuel Macron, have recently spok...
Germany will take over the presidency of the Council of the European Union today. Nele Marianne Ewer...
The agreement reached between the UK and the EU in December last year was billed as the final act in...
This paper analyses the National Populist Challenges to Europe’s Center Right. It assesses the cases...
Russia’s war against Ukraine is not only a challenge to Europe’s territorial borders, writes Kristin...
It is often assumed that if both France and Germany support an EU proposal, it is likely to be imple...
The remit of EU institutions has expanded inexorably, writes Jeremy Richardson (Oxford/University of...
We should remain sceptical of the changes to the UK’s approach to managing migration during the COVI...
The convoluted saga of Brexit, from the referendum to the final departure of the UK from the EU, has...
Tim Oliver (LSE Ideas) reviews The European Union in Crisis. He writes that this latest contribution...
European integration was once thought of as a largely technocratic process built around consensus, b...