6533b7d6fe1ef96bd1265bf4

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Of Walls and Fences: Brexit and the History of Cross-Border Migration

Pertti Ahonen

subject

ta520Historybusiness.industryEuropean unionGreat BritainInternational trademigrationEuroopan unioniBrexitmaahanmuuttoPolitical scienceta615BrexitbusinessIso-Britanniaimmigrationbrexit

description

Champions of Brexit have employed a large arsenal of arguments to boost their case for a Britain better off on its own, freed from its current European entanglements. All kinds of supposed ills have been linked to the country’s EU membership in British public debates over the years, ranging from petty bureaucratic absurdities, such as directives regarding crooked bananas, to heavy-handed rulings on higher matters of domestic and foreign policy. Lamentations about continental meddling have been accompanied by grand, nostalgic visions of an unfettered future Great Britain, ready to return to its proper, independent role on the global stage once it manages to cast off the shackles imposed by Brussels. Although these types of considerations undoubtedly contributed to the outcome of the British EU membership referendum of June 2016, arguably the main factor behind the narrow victory of the Brexiteers lay somewhere else: in fears of incoming migrants and dreams of simple solutions that would keep them out. peerReviewed

https://doi.org/10.1017/s0960777318000760