Brexit: Why Britain Voted to Leave the European Union

£8.995
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Brexit: Why Britain Voted to Leave the European Union

Brexit: Why Britain Voted to Leave the European Union

RRP: £17.99
Price: £8.995
£8.995 FREE Shipping

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Acknowledging the challenges and opportunities raised by Brexit for the agrifood supply chain and agricultural policies across the UK, this book provides the first in-depth analysis of agricultural policy developments across the UK’s four nations rooted in strong theoretical and practical . Tim Oliver shows not only how Brexit came to happen and how it is unfolding as a series of processes in the UK, Europe and the world. The beautiful thing about this book and all the books in the series is that, because it’s an established series, everyone talks to them. From talking Brexit with Trump and trying not to embarrass the Queen, to courting communists and wasting a fortune on a pop concert that descended into farce, this is his honest, uncensored and highly entertaining diary of the campaign that changed the course of history. So a lot of people who weren’t in the habit of voting in general elections were motivated to go out and vote in the referendum, which is one of the reasons why we saw the result that we did.

The book is addressed both to specialists in cultural studies, and a wider audience interested in Brexit. Brexit and Beyond] predates Wightman and other major developments surrounding the UK’s planned exit from the European Union.

We’ve got a sense of what Brexit is, in the sense that we have a trade deal that specifies the nature of our relationship with the EU. It is also the case that the two sides, Remain and Leave, remain bitterly divided fully six years after the referendum on June 23rd 2016.

What hope for us now Brexit has brutally exposed the chasm between us in class, generation and region?She went to Harvard after her undergraduate degree and has stayed in the States ever since, ending up working in Trump’s White House. The fourth reason for British failure was that Johnson made the disastrous tactical decision to try to provoke the EU in the hope it would be shaken, even briefing it as “the mad man strategy”. Despite the decisive 1975 referendum in favour, Labour fought the 1983 election campaign on a manifesto pledge to withdraw. Voters who wouldn’t perhaps have been amenable to vote for a simple three-word slogan—’Take Back Control’—three years earlier, by 2019 would have done anything to put themselves out of the misery of Brexit. Beacháin has broken new ground and provided a useful map for a generation of political scientists and historians.

She also makes this rather unexpected comparison between Russia, the US and the UK, and how, in their own different ways, they’re wrestling with very serious problems to do with de-industrialization and how you cope with that. Anyone who wants to understand how successive Irish Governments have engaged with Northern Ireland should read it. First up is Brexitland: Identity, Diversity and the Reshaping of British Politics by Maria Sobolewska and Robert Ford. Among several books that try to answer it is this one from 2020 by a former British permanent representative to the eu and later adviser to Tony Blair.Bringing together leading experts from across the UK and Europe, this book provides a comprehensive analysis of the impact of Brexit on the energy sector in the UK and in the European Union and its Member States. I just wondered, six years after it happened, have we got a clear sense of what Brexit means, or is going to mean? Victor Jeleniewski Seidler is Emeritus Professor in the Department of Sociology, at Goldsmiths University of London.

I t has repeatedly been said that Britain’s act of leaving the European Union, known as Brexit, is a process, not a single event. Bestselling British novelist Cara Hunter—author of the DI Fawley series and Murder in the Family—talks us through some of her favourite crime novels set in the city of dreaming spires. One question often asked about Brexit is why Britain is the only member ever seriously to contemplate leaving the eu (though Greenland, a former Danish colony, set a precedent by walking out in 1985). The book as a whole aims to engage with the methodology, lexicon and explicitness of analytical perspectives in relation to Brexit. Boris Starling, author of The Bluffer's Guide to Brexit, talks us through some Brexit books that will leave you better read and even more mystified about what the future holds for Britain and Europe.

Sir Stephen is also the official historian of two earlier books on Britain and the European Community, from which this book draws extensively. In the face of “threats and unpredictability” he decided to remain “calm, confident and solid” and just keep going. State-of-the-art chapters cover the various factors which led to the success of the ‘Leave’ campaign, the role of EU institutions in Brexit, the implications for other member states and players in the international system, and questions of political legitimacy posed by the UK’s departure from the EU. It will also be a key resource for both UK and EU governments and policy actors seeking to broaden their perspective on Brexit. Seidler cogently highlights the potential of a politics of voice, and crucially, the urgency of the ethical project of listening.



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
  • EAN: 764486781913
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