Three main claims made by advocates of ‘Lexit’ – a ‘Left Brexit’ – are that the EU prevents the UK from ‘wholesale state intervention in the economy’, the EU is bad for workers’ rights, and that it cannot be reformed. All three claims are mistaken, argues Ewan McGaughey (King’s College London), because the EU supports any system of property ownership, it is constitutionally prevented from suppressing worker rights, and it is being continually reformed – far better than the international trade system
Contrary to some predictions, Britain's economy has not crashed in the two years since the EU refere...
Institutions and organizations are defined by competing sociomaterial logics. Divergence between the...
As the UK formally leaves the European Union this week, and enters the transition period, Alexandra ...
The remit of EU institutions has expanded inexorably, writes Jeremy Richardson (Oxford/University of...
The unprecedented fiscal package adopted by the European Council this summer – dubbed Next Generatio...
The latest edition of Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index was published on 21 ...
The government’s ‘deal’ with the EU is atrocious, writes Ruth Lea. The Withdrawal Agreement and the ...
The agreement reached between the UK and the EU in December last year was billed as the final act in...
Following the Brexit referendum, a number of organisations were set up to support the rights of EU c...
It is often assumed that if both France and Germany support an EU proposal, it is likely to be imple...
Russia’s war against Ukraine is not only a challenge to Europe’s territorial borders, writes Kristin...
The Covid-19 pandemic has prompted renewed debate over the architecture of Europe’s Economic and Mon...
Ewan Gibbs explains how major alterations to the politics of class and nationhood have their origins...
London’s strong position as a global city will remain post-pandemic, says Mark Kleinman (King’s Coll...
As the Withdrawal Agreement got massively defeated in the House of Commons the risks of a no deal ar...
Contrary to some predictions, Britain's economy has not crashed in the two years since the EU refere...
Institutions and organizations are defined by competing sociomaterial logics. Divergence between the...
As the UK formally leaves the European Union this week, and enters the transition period, Alexandra ...
The remit of EU institutions has expanded inexorably, writes Jeremy Richardson (Oxford/University of...
The unprecedented fiscal package adopted by the European Council this summer – dubbed Next Generatio...
The latest edition of Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index was published on 21 ...
The government’s ‘deal’ with the EU is atrocious, writes Ruth Lea. The Withdrawal Agreement and the ...
The agreement reached between the UK and the EU in December last year was billed as the final act in...
Following the Brexit referendum, a number of organisations were set up to support the rights of EU c...
It is often assumed that if both France and Germany support an EU proposal, it is likely to be imple...
Russia’s war against Ukraine is not only a challenge to Europe’s territorial borders, writes Kristin...
The Covid-19 pandemic has prompted renewed debate over the architecture of Europe’s Economic and Mon...
Ewan Gibbs explains how major alterations to the politics of class and nationhood have their origins...
London’s strong position as a global city will remain post-pandemic, says Mark Kleinman (King’s Coll...
As the Withdrawal Agreement got massively defeated in the House of Commons the risks of a no deal ar...
Contrary to some predictions, Britain's economy has not crashed in the two years since the EU refere...
Institutions and organizations are defined by competing sociomaterial logics. Divergence between the...
As the UK formally leaves the European Union this week, and enters the transition period, Alexandra ...