Refugees are using other, often more dangerous, routes, contributing to the increase in migrant deaths that we have seen in 2016.
We historians at the University of Warwick are very concerned about the racism that is becoming increasingly commonplace over Britain, especially in the aftermath of the Brexit vote.
How best can we Europeans re-establish at least a semblance of moral and economic justice in the future conduct of EU migration policy?
Citizens should be treated with dignity and respect and they should trust that the police are truly operating in their best interests.
Laia Ortiz discusses how Barcelona is trying to forge its own progressive integration policy for refugees, despite the constraints put on it by the Spanish government and the European Union.
A lack of political will and a hulking bureaucracy frustrate efforts to find a solution to the migrant crisis at the national level. Multilevel governance is the answer.
Even where populists don’t win power through the ballot box, they gain it through shaping policy and public debate.
Ultimately, the economic claims made by Remain were unconvincing because those in power made them so.
"A future you can believe in" is the reverse of "Make America great again", because it doesn’t retreat into moral rejection or resistance politics.
If the new EU data protection regulation is enforced equally for EU and non-EU companies, supported by anti-trust and consumer protection laws, new types of data-based monopolization could be controlled.