Rebordering Britain & Britons after Brexit
Mapping social science research on Brexit and migration
Keyword search
Country / region studied
Africa (1)Asia (1)Australia (4)Belgium (3)British Overseas Territories (3)Bulgaria (1)Canada (2)CARICOM (2)China (1)Croatia (1)Cyprus (3)Czech Republic (3)Estonia (1)EU (97)Europe's colonies in the Caribbean, the Atlantic, and the Indian Ocean (1)France (3)Germany (9)Hungary (1)India (1)Ireland (12)Japan (1)Latvia (1)Lithuania (2)Luxembourg (1)Netherlands (2)North America (1)Norway (1)Poland (3)Romania (2)Slovak Republic (2)Southern European countries (1)Spain (8)St Helena (1)Switzerland (2)Turkey (3)United Kingdom (366)USA (3)Western Balkans (1)
Population studied
Arab (1)Australian (1)Bangladesh-Origin Muslim (1)British (49)British-Polish (1)Bulgarian (3)Caribbean (1)Central and Eastern European (7)Chinese (2)Colombian-Spanish (1)East Timorese (1)Eastern European (3)EU (54)Finnish (1)French (2)German (1)Hungarian (1)Indian (2)Irish (2)Italian (6)Italian-Bangladeshi (3)Latin American (1)Latvian (2)Lithuanian (4)Nordic migrants (1)Polish (41)Portuguese (1)Post-Soviet migrants (1)Roma (3)Romanian (5)Russian (2)Slovak (1)Somali (2)Spanish (5)St Helenian (1)Turkish (1)
1 articles by Barbara Jankowska
Brexit and the Future of the European Union: Firm-Level Perspectives
Following the British referendum held on June 23, 2016, voters supported the withdrawal of the UK from the European Union (EU) (Brexit), a starting point for the third round of European crisis, following the eurozone debt crisis and the migration crisis.