Migrants, blocked from going further into Europe, sit in a park in central Belgrade.
Koca Sulejmanovic/EPA
Blocked from crossing borders further into Europe, migrants are turning to smugglers.
Clouds are gathering.
Patrick Müller
The European Union has faced crises before but not this many at the same time.
EPA/Christian Bruna
The remaining member states are working out how to survive Brexit.
A German solider displays a Eurocorps badge.
EPA/Patrick Seeger
When it loses the UK, the EU loses an important military power, which makes the remaining countries keener than ever to collaborate.
In the EU, Apple has made a powerful enemy.
Dado Ruvic/Reuters
Australian companies could fall foul of the same state aid rules being applied to Apple to crack down on tax avoidance.
Keeping schtum.
Carl Court/PA Wire
Theresa May is wise to play the long game when it comes to negotiating the UK’s exit from the EU.
Owen Humphreys / PA Wire
The road to Brexit looks long and winding, but it seems extremely unlikely that any outcome which threatens the long-term viability of foreign investment in the UK will be tenable.
EPA/Bart Maat
The latest polls show Wilders’ PVV on course to be largest party in the Dutch parliament.
Raising more questions than answers.
EPA/How Hwee Young
Britain’s prime minister keeps saying ‘Brexit means Brexit’ but exactly what this looks like is far from clear.
The EU’s taken a bite out of Apple’s profits.
EPA/Shawn Thew
The EU’s ruling is profoundly misguided and could undermine US investment in Europe.
African trade and economic integration is set for growth.
Shutterstock
The African trade and integration spaces are seeing significant improvements and gathering even more momentum in the face of Brexit. Sarah Logan looks at the driving factors.
Orban is on a high after the Brexit vote.
EPA/Olivier Hoslet
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has caught referendum fever. He is giving his public a vote on refugee policy in what is being seen as a two-fingered salute to the EU.
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Brexiteers keen to follow Norway’s example face an awkward dilemma.
Honeybees aren’t the only wildlife affected by pesticides – wild bees and butterflies also feel the effect.
Wild bee image from www.shutterstock.com
Two new studies have linked controversial pesticides neonicotinoides to wild bee and butterfly declines.
Doing the berry hard jobs.
JD Hancock
EU workers in the UK are highly employed and concentrated in a few key areas of the economy – posing problems if they are no longer welcome post-Brexit.
Courting trouble.
Piotr Marcinski
UK companies currently trade in the EU knowing that legal disputes will be enforced in any member state. Brexit risks changing all that.
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The Brexiteer’s desire to ‘take back control’ fails to account for the realities of the globalised world we live in.
European laws are often actually written in pen.
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The best option for future relations seems to be EEA membership, but that puts paid to the ideal of ‘taking back control’.
The IMF has criticised itself, but it’s a grey wash.
Reuters/Joshua Roberts/File Photo
A report into the IMF’s handling of the euro crisis carefully avoids blame, while attempting to reclaim influence.
Keeping the lights on.
Davide Barelli/Flickr
Post-Brexit Britain will have many rivals eager to exploit any weakness in London’s primacy as a home for banking.