The extraction of revenue is an integral component of UK immigration control. Drawing on new data, Jon Burnett and Fidelis Chebe examine the functions of charging regimes as a distinct form of statecraft that contributes to the political economy of financial power, with significant implications for understandings of criminalisation and immigration enforcement
David Clayton and David Higgins assess UK public procurement policy since the early 1970s. They expl...
Felix FitzRoy and David Spencer highlight some fundamental problems of UK economic policy, as expose...
Immigration is no longer the pressing concern among the electorate that it was prior to the Brexit r...
Polling data suggests that Brexit is viewed as the most important issue for voters ahead of the UK’s...
The prospect of Brexit has already made the UK a less attractive option for new EU migrants, accordi...
The British economy is structurally dependent on migrant workers because it is lightly regulated and...
Scott James and Lucia Quaglia discuss the UK’s role in shaping post-crisis financial regulatory refo...
Through its insistence on leaving the EU, the May government has created an immense, administrative ...
Why does the government get defeated so often in immigration cases? Matt Williams explains that the ...
The latest UK unemployment figures showed unemployment at its lowest level since the 1970s, but ther...
In the London-centric world of the UK-wide and English media, too little consideration has yet been ...
The British economic model needs fundamental reform, without which the UK will remain in a particula...
For citizens to get involved in governing themselves and participating in politics, they must be abl...
Jeremy Richardson explains how the British policy-making style has been steadily shifting away from ...
While the government's immigration proposals are highly restrictive, research suggests that the publ...
David Clayton and David Higgins assess UK public procurement policy since the early 1970s. They expl...
Felix FitzRoy and David Spencer highlight some fundamental problems of UK economic policy, as expose...
Immigration is no longer the pressing concern among the electorate that it was prior to the Brexit r...
Polling data suggests that Brexit is viewed as the most important issue for voters ahead of the UK’s...
The prospect of Brexit has already made the UK a less attractive option for new EU migrants, accordi...
The British economy is structurally dependent on migrant workers because it is lightly regulated and...
Scott James and Lucia Quaglia discuss the UK’s role in shaping post-crisis financial regulatory refo...
Through its insistence on leaving the EU, the May government has created an immense, administrative ...
Why does the government get defeated so often in immigration cases? Matt Williams explains that the ...
The latest UK unemployment figures showed unemployment at its lowest level since the 1970s, but ther...
In the London-centric world of the UK-wide and English media, too little consideration has yet been ...
The British economic model needs fundamental reform, without which the UK will remain in a particula...
For citizens to get involved in governing themselves and participating in politics, they must be abl...
Jeremy Richardson explains how the British policy-making style has been steadily shifting away from ...
While the government's immigration proposals are highly restrictive, research suggests that the publ...
David Clayton and David Higgins assess UK public procurement policy since the early 1970s. They expl...
Felix FitzRoy and David Spencer highlight some fundamental problems of UK economic policy, as expose...
Immigration is no longer the pressing concern among the electorate that it was prior to the Brexit r...