Gina Miller, whose challenge against the government has gone to the Supreme Court.
Victoria Jones/ PA Wire
Great expectations or much ado about nothing?
Softer than she seems.
EPA/Laurent Gillieron
The UK government’s inability to devise a fundamentally new economic policy is why it will likely fudge a soft Brexit.
After Brexit, Britain will be on the outside of the European Court of Justice.
katarina_dzurekova/flickr.com
After Brexit, Theresa May says the UK will ‘take back control of our laws’.
A plan for Britain needs European co-operation.
PA/Kirsty Wigglesworth
Going in with all guns blazing is not really how Europe does business – but that’s never stopped Britain.
Standing tall.
shutterstock.com
The one audience that was prepared for a hard Brexit, it seems, was the City of London.
A ‘Global Britain’ may be difficult to achieve.
Facundo Arrizabalaga
Theresa May will find that having a seat at the table is not the same as being on the wrong side of it.
shutterstock.com
The way the pound rebounded does not reflect long-term confidence in the currency.
May takes a hard line on Brexit.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
The UK prime minister is squaring up to European negotiators in pledging a hard Brexit. But is she overplaying her hand?
Theresa May goes global.
Kirsty Wigglesworth PA Wire/PA Images
The UK’s decision to leave the single market and customs union will have huge consequences.
The Malta free port, built in 1988.
Sludge G./Flickr
As Europe discusses the reasons behind and reaction to the Brexit thunderclap, some in the UK are already seeing business opportunities – through the free ports, a notion abandoned by the EU.
A new plan.
Shutterstock
The country’s new scheme could make it an extremely popular destination.
Italian police at a press conference after Berlin attacker was killed in Italy.
AP Photo/Luca Bruno
The Berlin terror attack at the end of 2016 will have major political implications for Germany’s elections this year and an uneasy European Union, writes a German studies scholar.
Internally displaced people wait to collect tarps at a camp in Mubimbi, the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Jana Asenbrennerova / Reuters
As long as the EU strikes deals with dictators and pushes trade agreements that worsen the economic situation in many African countries, attempts to reduce migratory pressure will fail.
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.
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.
Better living conditions in Greece would encourage more migrants to stay.
Alkis Konstantinidis/Reuters
Improving conditions in Turkey and Greece may convince more refugees to stay where they are.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel speaks at a conference for her party.
AP Photo/Martin Meissner
In reelection bid, Merkel’s not just up against a xenophobic, nationalist party in Germany. In the wake of Trump’s election, liberal democracies around the world hope she’ll defend them, too.
Fishers in Mozambique won’t benefit from southern Africa’s latest deal with the EU.
Grant Neuenburg/Reuters
A deal intended to help southern African countries develop could instead turn them into an EU dumping ground for cheap goods.
Italy faces uncertain times ahead.
EPA/Alessandro di Meo
Markets haven’t panicked as they did with Brexit and Trump, but Italy faces serious economic issues in the near future.