Rebordering Britain & Britons after Brexit
Mapping social science research on Brexit and migration
Keyword search
Country / region studied
Africa (1)Asia (1)Australia (4)Austria (1)Belgium (3)British Overseas Territories (3)Bulgaria (1)Canada (2)CARICOM (2)Central and Eastern Europe (1)China (2)Croatia (1)Cyprus (3)Czech Republic (3)Denmark (2)Estonia (1)EU (106)Europe (2)Europe's colonies in the Caribbean, the Atlantic, and the Indian Ocean (1)Finland (1)France (5)Germany (14)Global (1)Hong Kong (1)Hungary (1)Iceland (1)India (1)Ireland (18)Japan (1)Latvia (1)Lithuania (2)Luxembourg (1)Middle East (1)Netherlands (4)North America (1)Norway (1)OECD (1)Poland (4)Romania (2)Slovak Republic (2)Southern European countries (1)Spain (11)St Helena (1)Switzerland (3)Turkey (3)United Kingdom (457)United States (2)USA (3)Western Balkans (1)
Population studied
Arab (1)Asian (1)Australian (1)Bangladesh-Origin Muslim (1)British (61)British-Polish (1)British-Somali (1)British-Yemeni (1)Bulgarian (6)Caribbean (1)Central and Eastern European (13)Chinese (3)Colombian-Spanish (1)East Timorese (1)Eastern European (4)EU (68)Filipinx (2)Finnish (2)French (5)German (1)Global (1)Greek (1)Hongkongers (1)Hungarian (1)Indian (4)Iraqi (1)Irish (3)Italian (8)Italian-Bangladeshi (3)Latin American (1)Latvian (4)Libyan (1)Lithuanian (5)non-EU (2)Nordic migrants (1)Northern Irish (3)Norway (1)Onward Latin Americans (1)Polish (49)Portuguese (2)Post-Soviet migrants (1)Roma (4)Romanian (7)Russian (2)Scottish (2)Slovak (1)Somali (2)Spanish (8)St Helenian (1)Timorese (1)Turkish (1)UK-born (1)
1 articles covering the Bangladesh-Origin Muslim population
The hostile environment, Brexit, and `reactive-' or `protective transnationalism'
The `reactive transnationalism hypothesis' posits a relationship between discrimination and transnational practice. The concept has generally been studied using quantitative methods, but a qualitative approach augments our understanding of two context-specific dimensions: