Rebordering Britain & Britons after Brexit
Mapping social science research on Brexit and migration
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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)
2 articles tagged Twitter
Justice in Automated Administration
Public administration has, for some time now, been undergoing a digital transformation. Part of this change is the replacement of human public officials with automated decision-making systems. Beyond its immediate social and political significance…
Moral Expressions in 280 Characters or Less: An Analysis of Politician Tweets Following the 2016 Brexit Referendum Vote
Ideas about morality are deeply entrenched into political opinions. This article examines the online communication of British parliamentarians from May 2017-December 2019, following the 2016 referendum that resulted in Britain's exit (Brexit) from the European Union.