The authoritative source for independent research on UK-EU relations

14 Jun 2017

Policies

Through the study of Eurochildren and their families and their experience and responses to Brexit, the project aims to portrait the emergence of a new politics of belonging which reconfigures discursively and legally who belong to a post-EU Britain and establish a baseline for future research on migration and settlement decision making in families with EU27 nationals following the formal exit of the European Union.

Visit the project’s website: EU families and Eurochildren

MORE FROM THIS THEME

Brexit, trade and manufacturing: a Midlands’ perspective 

SVB’s collapse raises issues for the financing of the UK tech sector and banking regulation

What does the public think about immigration?

AUKUS: more than submarines

AUKUS – an Australian perspective

Recent Articles