Eyeing up the future.
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There are three main types of forecast when it comes to the economic effects of Brexit – here’s how to tell the difference between them.
European Council President, Donald Tusk, meets Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on a visit to Ankara in September 2015.
Turkish President Press Office
Supporters of the campaign for Brexit claim the UK could not veto Turkish accession to the EU. We asked two academics to check the facts.
British soldiers on exercises.
Ben Birchall/PA Archive
Unpicking the gap between rhetoric and reality.
Greece needs genuine European support.
EPA/Alexandros Vlachos
Economic sense has been largely irrelevant in the unfolding Greek drama. Instead, morality has been at its heart.
Osborne, managing expectations?
Daniel Leal-Olivas/PA
Part two of British chancellor George Osborne’s case for staying put is realistic but flawed.
EPA/Olivier Hoslet
Explaining how the European Parliament and Commission combine to represent the interests of 28 member states.
Napoleon victorious at the 1805 Battle of Austerlitz.
François Gérard via Wikimedia Commons
A historian responds to Boris Johnson’s claim that the EU is pursuing a powerful super-state, like Hitler.
Lucian Milasan/www.shutterstock.com
Personality politics is obscuring the information that voters need to make their decision on June 23.
Moria detention camp on Lesvos.
Orestis Panagiotou/EPA
A report from Lesbos, where thousands of refugees are living in inhumane conditions.
Images Money
Brexit would throw up all manner of problems for the UK economy, including a rise in borrowing costs for homeowners.
DNA: the EU in us all.
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Our bodies are teeming with petty bureaucrats and red tape – it’s the very fabric for life on Earth.
Joerg Cartstensen/EPA
Leave had a 20 point lead over Remain in a recent YouGov poll – but this Brexit referendum concerned Britain’s membership of the Eurovision Song Contest, not Europe.
Riot police on the streets of Athens in early May.
Orestis Panagiotou/EPA
A Brexit would be a chance to actually create a European project – but the EU needs to be dismantled first.
Andrew Cowie/EPA
Migration Watch claims there could be another 50,000 EU migrants a year coming to the UK than currently thought. We asked two academics to look at the numbers.
And one more thing.
PA/Leon Neal
The prime minister’s security speech has been labelled fear mongering.
European collaboration: great in theory, exclusionary in practice.
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The EU may claim it is “united in diversity” but the reality is very different.
Andy Rain/EPA
Chris Grayling and Alan Johnson disagree on whether the UK is on the winning side at the EU Council. Two academics assess who is right.
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The bilateral deals struck over the years between Switzerland and the EU have been suggested as alternatives for the UK if it votes to leave in the referendum.
quinnanya
Without European laws and courts to strike down overreaching UK legislation, post-Brexit Britons may see more invasions of their privacy.
Nigel Farage – wielding the fear stick.
Andy Rain/EPA
When it comes to Brexit, both the Leave and Remain camps are using psychological trickery to convince voters.