Brexit & Beyond

Brexit & Beyond

Individual Contributors to Policy Commons

Chris Grey is Emeritus Professor of Organization Studies at Royal Holloway, University of London, and was previously a Professor at Cambridge University and Warwick University. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences (FAcSS). He originally studied Economics and Politics at Manchester University, where he also gained a PhD on the regulation of financial services. "Best guy to follow on Brexit for intelligent analysis" Annette Dittert, ARD German TV. "Consistently outstanding analysis of Brexit" Jonathan Dimbleby. "The best writer on Brexit" Chris Lockwood, Europe Editor, The Economist. "A must-read for anyone following Brexit" David Allen Green, FT. "The doyen of Brexit commentators" Chris Johns, Irish Times. @ChrisGrey@mastodon.online & Twitter @chrisgreybrexit


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Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 1 July 2022 English

Having last week written some thoughts about the next six years of the Brexit process, this week has had a distinctly ‘back to 2019’ feeling about it with the passing …

‘Testing the Temperature’ report</a> from Queen’s University Belfast.<br /><br />


Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 17 June 2022 English

Since the very early days of this blog in 2016, I have been writing about the self-pitying victimhood and perpetual grievance that permeates the political psychology of Brexit. A recent …

pdf" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow">from Queen’s University Belfast in February 2022</a>, shows that


Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 21 February 2022 English

In today’s Daily Mail one of the most longstanding and hard line Brexiters, the former Tory Party leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith, yet again put forward a series of arguments …

in the words of Professor Katy Hayward of Queen’s University Belfast – a leading expert on the issue -


Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 4 February 2022 English

Anniversaries matter, both in our personal lives and in the way that societies and nations define themselves. What we do and don’t celebrate or commemorate, and how, and what we …

l regulation</a> by Dr Viviane Gravey of Queen’s University Belfast or <a href="https://twitter.com/


Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 15 October 2021 English

As has been expected for some months, the autumn crisis over the Northern Ireland Protocol (NIP) began in earnest this week. Its outcome is difficult to predict, but has the …

Twitter thread by Professor David Phinnemore of Queen’s University Belfast, a leading expert on the NIP, and


Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 30 July 2021 English

In the years before the Referendum – long before this blog started, so I haven’t kept links – I quite often came across pro-leave people explaining, usually in rather lofty …

Professors Katy Hayward and Dave Phinnemore of Queen’s University Belfast explain, <a href="https://blogs.lse


Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 23 April 2021 English

We’re probably long past the closing date for nominations for the prize for the most absurd and mendacious comment about Brexit, including the category reserved for those made by Boris …

-ni/" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow">Queen’s University Belfast’s ESRC-funded Post-Brexit Governance


Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 13 December 2020 English

So yet another supposedly final deadline has come and gone, and the ludicrous ‘will they, won’t they’ theatre of the last few months continues. Ludicrous, but debilitating, too, in a …

rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow">Katy Hayward of Queen’s University Belfast, explained</a> this does not mean


Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 1 May 2020 English

This week’s Brexit news, such as it is, continues to circle around arguments for and against extending the transition period. The government’s substantive arguments against doing so – state aid …

rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow">Dr Katy Hayward of Queen’s University, Belfast has pointed out this week</a>) and