Fundamental political questions about the character and outlook of a post-Brexit Britain need to be answered before we worry about the specificities of economic sectors and trade relationships.
Business has mixed feelings over Brexit, and a relatively small number of factors can explain why.
The British economy has not suffered the dire consequences projected prior to the referendum. Were the pessimists wrong, is it a delayed reaction, or are there other forces at work?
The economy will be centre stage when Brexit negotiations begin in 2017. All week we’re looking at the possible consequences of different types of Brexit on specific sectors and the economy as a whole.
Labour needs to resist its drift toward a more ambivalent position on free movement.
Brexit is the second time Britain has moved to strip citizenship rights from many of its existing citizens.
Ultimately, the economic claims made by Remain were unconvincing because those in power made them so.
Brexit was a vote largely against regular movement from the EU, but what about refugees? A new series seek to explore what Brexit will mean for those in search of safety.
The crisis of neoliberal globalisation has made the issue of sovereignty the centre of contemporary political discourse. If the Left is to conquer post-neoliberal hegemony it has to construct a progressive view of sovereignty.
Theresa May may come to regret picking a fight with the law.
"This report, authored by two of our country’s leading experts on social integration, uncovers a picture that is more segregated by ethnicity than many of us have cared to admit."
Can mixed communities and a shared society in the UK become recognised as a desirable objective, supported by a strategy and policy framework?