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An eco-friendly EU withdrawal is still possible.
Continue cooperation is crucial.
EPA/Olivier Hoslet
London and Brussels should be constructive about Brexit – for both their financial benefit.
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The UK has to move on from these petty squabbles and start coming up with a plan.
Trump supporters celebrating.
Michael Reynolds/EPA
The more we have to defend our choice to others, the more certain we become that we are right. So what can we do about it?
The Yorck Project: 10.000 Meisterwerke der Malerei via Wikimedia Commons
Under the Tudors, parliamentary sovereignty became paramount.
Rogers was a key figure in Brexit negotiations.
EPA/Thierry Roge
The lack of respect shown to a senior civil servant working hard to make Brexit work is troubling.
We’re in with the out-crowd Donald.
Gerald Herbert AP/Press Association Images
A year of political upheavals introduced us to the new insurgent tribes.
EPA/Facundo Arrizabalaga
It’s become a popular meme: 2016 was the worst year ever. We’ll be lucky if it was.
AAP/Reuters/The Conversation
Brexit, Trump, terrorism, 18C, safe schools, the gay marriage plebiscite, a government with a wafer-thin majority and a fractious Senate: it has been quite a year in politics.
Happy new year.
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Where do we go from here? After a dramatic year, we look ahead to some key economic and political trends that will influence our lives over the next 12 months.
From turkeys to salmon and brussels sprouts, modern living is putting mounting pressure on the festive feast.
Fyodor Dostoyevsky.
Dostoevsky’s infamous novel reflected a wave of reaction against economic liberalism, not unlike that which has occurred during 2016.
BAE Systems displaying the Typhoon fighter jet.
EPA/Karel Prinsloo
One of the UK’s biggest export industries depends heavily on cooperation with other EU member states.
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If education and tolerance go hand in hand, how is it possible that anti-immigrant sentiments are so virulent in educated populations?
The world economy is inextricably linked with the US.
Tami Chappell/Reuters
A lot has changed in the global economy since the Federal Budget 2016.
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Britain has a number of bilateral treaties with Eastern European countries that will remain after Brexit.
The success of One Nation in this year’s election is part of the populist push.
AAP/Dan Peled
Academic analysis is often ignored – and this is an indictment not of readers, but of academics.
Ms Jane Campbell / Shutterstock.com
You might be familiar with Article 50, but Article 127 of another European treaty could be as important when it comes to Brexit.
Mario Draghi, ECB president.
EPA
Quantitative easing cannot single-handedly save Europe.
Andreas Schleicher, the man in charge of the global education numbers.
EPA
The direct line between world education policy and Donald Trump looks like this.