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Rebordering Britain & Britons after Brexit

What Have I Done to Deserve This?' Young Italian migrants in Britain narrate their reaction to brexit and plans for the future

Abstract

The aim of this article is to describe the reactions of young Italian migrants in Britain to "Brexit", the 2016 referendum decision for the UK to leave the European Union. Brexit is seen as an historical moment of "rupture" which is not only reorienting Britain's relationship with Europe and the world but is also deeply affecting the lives of its 3.2 million migrants from the EU. The empirical material comes from 35 in-depth interviews with young Italian migrants living and either studying or working in the London region: 20 interviews carried out pre-referendum and 15 post-Brexit. The analysis documents their immediate reactions and interpretations of the result (surprise, shock, anger, a sense of betrayal), their coping strategies (stressing their "rights to belong" and drawing a social boundary between themselves and "other", i.e. East European migrants), and their plans for the future. On this last question, Brexit has not fundamentally changed their ultimate plans to return home "one day", but in some cases it has accelerated this decision, as well as making them think about moving to another European country. © 2018 Pacini Editore. All rights reserved.

Journal

Rivista Geografica Italiana

Authors

Caterina Mazzilli (United Kingdom)
Russell King (United Kingdom)

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