Poles have lived, worked, and settled in the UK for 12 years now. It's no longer so easy for them to pick up and leave.
Uncontrolled EU migration costs Britain financially and increases the strain on public services, resulting in a lower quality of life for many Britons and a less generous nation.
Brexit campaigners have yet to offer credible visions on immigration that address voters concerns while also acknowledging certain realities. Whichever side does so will greatly improve their chances in June.
The Leave campaign argues Brexit would give Britain back its control over immigration. Even if that were true, the current situation suggests control best comes through cooperation.
Voters often confuse internal and external EU migration, mistakenly assuming that a Brexit would better prevent non-EU nationals from 'sneaking in'. It won't.
Free movement is part and parcel of continued access to European markets. Is it worth sacrificing the latter to reduce the former?
Migration brings net gains to the UK, and to hamper it would likely be as bad for British nationals as it would be for EU migrants.
EU migration could be the make or break issue of the Brexit campaigns. Both sides understand this, but how will they approach the topic?
This challenge for ‘in’ campaigners is to answer the demands of citizens without offering Eurosceptics an opportunity to frame the debate.
The UK has shown little interest of late in enhancing military cooperation with Europe, preferring to work through NATO instead. Would a vote for Brexit change that?
The Danes have had eight EU referendums to date. A veteran campaigner and former Danish MP relates her experience of these and explains the mechanics of influencing a referendum vote.
EU referendum debates in the Netherlands show that decades of democratisation have led to a new kind of a citizen that demands to be heard.