Abby Innes writes that the vote to leave the EU and the administrative chaos around it pull into focus the crisis we should have been talking about before: the failures of homegrown neoliberal policies and their dire implications. She argues that while Brexit has been heralded by supporters as a solution to a number of problems, what it will actually do is to accelerate to the point of ‘completion’ the already failed experiments to reform the state
Territorial governance in the UK has taken the form of ‘Schrodinger’s devolution’, where the devolve...
Prime Minister Theresa May's speech in Florence was intended to move forward stalled Brexit negotiat...
The government has refused to publish its sector-by-sector analyses of the impact of Brexit, arguing...
It is increasingly clear that Brexit has cost not saved money, encumbered not liberated trade, inhib...
The furore over a Tory MP sending a letter to all university vice chancellors asking for the names o...
Brexit has given rise to a range of critical issues. For example, was the composition of the elector...
Julia Rone discusses how both Leavers and Remainers appealed to popular and parliamentary sovereignt...
The UK seems to be rapidly heading for one of the most tangled and tumultuous political periods in m...
State aid is currently regulated by the EU and, after Brexit, the government intends to transpose th...
Many people believe that the UK's decision to leave the EU spells trouble for both country and conti...
The proposed new sifting committee for Statutory Instruments under the EU (Withdrawal) Bill will not...
Brexit had been falsely presented in 2016 as either economically positive or at worst economically n...
In his recent testimony to the House of Lords, Sir Ivan Rogers criticised as premature and ill-prepa...
One of the key political issues during the Covid-19 pandemic has been the extent to which health out...
What rhetorical strategies do Brexiteers adopt to defend their position? Sten Hansson (University of...
Territorial governance in the UK has taken the form of ‘Schrodinger’s devolution’, where the devolve...
Prime Minister Theresa May's speech in Florence was intended to move forward stalled Brexit negotiat...
The government has refused to publish its sector-by-sector analyses of the impact of Brexit, arguing...
It is increasingly clear that Brexit has cost not saved money, encumbered not liberated trade, inhib...
The furore over a Tory MP sending a letter to all university vice chancellors asking for the names o...
Brexit has given rise to a range of critical issues. For example, was the composition of the elector...
Julia Rone discusses how both Leavers and Remainers appealed to popular and parliamentary sovereignt...
The UK seems to be rapidly heading for one of the most tangled and tumultuous political periods in m...
State aid is currently regulated by the EU and, after Brexit, the government intends to transpose th...
Many people believe that the UK's decision to leave the EU spells trouble for both country and conti...
The proposed new sifting committee for Statutory Instruments under the EU (Withdrawal) Bill will not...
Brexit had been falsely presented in 2016 as either economically positive or at worst economically n...
In his recent testimony to the House of Lords, Sir Ivan Rogers criticised as premature and ill-prepa...
One of the key political issues during the Covid-19 pandemic has been the extent to which health out...
What rhetorical strategies do Brexiteers adopt to defend their position? Sten Hansson (University of...
Territorial governance in the UK has taken the form of ‘Schrodinger’s devolution’, where the devolve...
Prime Minister Theresa May's speech in Florence was intended to move forward stalled Brexit negotiat...
The government has refused to publish its sector-by-sector analyses of the impact of Brexit, arguing...