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’.
EPA/Benoit Tessier
While the French public comes to terms with a series of appalling attacks, politicians seize the opportunity to position themselves ahead of next year’s Presidential election.
Catching up on the UK news.
EPA/Jorge Zapata
The case of a man stripped of his EU citizenship offers some guidance for emigrants living in legally uncharted territory after the Brexit vote.
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The added costs from trade-related red tape that will result from leaving the EU are certain and they will be costly for business and government.
Please, you must go now.
EPA/Ian Langsdon
Britain might want to play nice and exit calmly, but the French president must avoid giving ammunition to Frexiters.
Meet new British PM: Check.
EPA/Odd Andersen
Everyone is looking to the German leader to save the union in the wake of the Brexit vote.
Greece has seen a spike in poverty levels.
EPA/Orestis Panagiotou
New research shows how the financial crisis led to a dramatic shift in poverty across Europe.
The aftermath of the failed coup.
EPA/Sedat Suna
President Erdoğan has described the failed coup as a ‘gift from god’. And we can expect him to make the most of it.
EPA/Sedat Suna
Taking over a country by military force is much harder in this age of globalised rights.
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Euroscepticism, referenda and debates about national identity: the similarities betwen Switzerland and the UK are striking.
Headed for number 11.
Dominic Lipinski / PA Wire
How the new chancellor must do to mitigate the economic effects of Brexit.
President Obama with UK Prime Minister David Cameron.
NATO
Obama has said he expects European allies to chip in their fair share of defense spending, and European public opinion supports it. But as a Tufts expert points out, many challenges in Europe remain.
Rumpled.
Sergeant Paul Shaw LBIPP (Army)/MOD
The second organisational pillar of the European order isn’t as threatened as the EU – but there’s trouble ahead.
Without democratic reform, the time ahead for both Britain and the EU looks bleak indeed.
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The Brexit vote was the outcome of the disillusionment and disengagement that have permeated the UK. Many Europeans share that mood, which is why both the UK and EU need radical democratic surgery.
EPA/Ian Langsdon
Angela Merkel and François Hollande are now alone at the top table, and there are no prizes for guessing who is drawing up the seating plan.
Austrian Freedom Party presidential candidate Norbert Hofer took the far right to the brink of victory in the recent election.
Reuters
Radical right populists are on the brink of power in Austria and making gains across the region. And the European leaders who once were willing to publicly condemn them are silent now.
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There is debate among lawyers on whether the process for a Brexit, once begun, can be stopped.
Young people, angry at the vote for Brexit, outside Downing Street.
Isabel Infantes / PA Wire
What leaving the EU means for research, student experience and higher education reforms.
Looking behind the headline numbers.
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There are plenty of reasons to reject the consensus that Brexit will be costly to the UK economy.
Would monsieur like to pay by Visa or Mastercard?
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Thanks to Brexit the NHS will be under-funded and short-staffed. Also, you might not receive free emergency healthcare if you travel to Europe.