Results 261 to 270 of about 2,024 (304)
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Hard Brexit: Will there be consequences for UK dentistry?

Faculty Dental Journal, 2017
Brexit will be a significant event, the outcomes and consequences of which are impossible to predict fully. However, it is safe to say that things will change, some at a cost, while hopefully others will be made to work to the advantage of the UK. Dentistry will not be immune to Brexit-related changes.
openaire   +1 more source

Possible Consequences of Brexit in the Area of Indirect Taxation: Why Prime Minister May Talks about a Hard Brexit, but Really Needs a Soft Brexit!

World Tax Journal, 2017
The Brexit referendum of June 2016 gave rise to tremendous confusion in the United Kingdom, the European Union and internationally. In her subsequent presentations and White Papers, Prime Minister May appeared to be trying to calm the political waters at home by reassuring the people of Britain that “Brexit is Brexit” and that UK sovereignty and ...
Lamensch, Marie, Van Thiel, Servatius
openaire   +2 more sources

Hard Brexit could cripple UK science, warn top scientists

BMJ, 2018
Leading scientists have renewed warnings that a “hard” Brexit threatens European research progress, amid fresh signs that the UK will struggle to retain top scientists. Paul Nurse, head of the Francis Crick Institute in London, said that exiting the EU without a deal in place could “cripple” UK science.
openaire   +2 more sources

Brexit as a question of political rationality: hard choices for the UK, lessons for EU sustainability

2020
Brexit can be viewed as a logical consequence and culmination of the UK harbouring ever more divergent preferences from the EU. Such divergence became incompatible and arguably unsustainable when EU integration deepened to EMU and the UK was not prepared to go along with the requirements to make it function.
Bongardt, Annette, Torres, Francisco
openaire   +1 more source

Hard Brexit ahead: breaking the deadlock

2019
Negotiations between the EU and the UK have reached deadlock, with the positions of the UK (no backstop, no single market, no customs union, no dependence on the ECJ), Ireland (backstop, no hard border) and the EU (backstop, indivisibility of the four freedoms, no cherry-picking) all being mutually exclusive.
Felbermayr, Gabriel J.   +5 more
openaire   +1 more source

Potential international employment effects of a hard Brexit

2019
We use the World Input Output Database (WIOD) to estimate the potential employment effects of a hard Brexit in 43 countries. In line with other studies we assume that imports from the European Union (EU) to the UK will decline by 25% after a hard Brexit.
Brautzsch, Hans-Ulrich   +1 more
openaire   +1 more source

The Hard Truths of Brexit

Journal of Democracy, 2020
openaire   +1 more source

Negotiating Brexit: The Cultural Sources of British Hard Bargaining

Journal of Common Market Studies, 2021
Benjamin Martill
exaly  

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