
The UK in a Changing Europe promotes rigorous, high-quality and independent research into the complex and ever changing relationship between the UK and the EU.
Following the referendum on the UK’s membership of the EU, the topic of migration from other EU countries and free movement has been highlighted as critical and policy-relevant. The debate has also reflected concerns about an overstretched welfare system and alleged benefit tourism. But who are the EU migrants living in the UK, who will arguably be among those most immediately and directly affected by the outcome of the referendum? How have policy changes discussed in the run-up to the referendum already changed EU migrants’ entitlements, and how might this affect their economic contribution to the British economy? What coping strategies do EU migrants themselves envisage as the UK leaves the EU? In order to address this evidence gap, research has been undertaken by the to provide an independent source of information and insight about UK-EU relations.
The research projects cover six key topics:
The evidence generated by researchers at the ÃÛÌÒTV informed a high-profile roundtable chaired by Hilary Benn MP (Chairman of the House of Commons 'Exiting the European Union Select Committee'), which was held in the Palace of Westminster on 24th April 2017.
The policy roundtable ‘Tales of migration: citizenship, benefits and identity in Brexit Britain’ addressed the above key topics to inform and stimulate discussion amongst three stakeholder audiences namely policymakers (specifically MPs, Home Office and DExEu), EU and Non EU migrants and practitioners and third sector providers (such as the Migrants Rights Network, Institute for Public Policy etc).
Discussants included:
-Associate Professor of Demography within Social Statistics & Demography at the ÃÛÌÒTV
– Professor of Demography and International Social Policy, Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the ÃÛÌÒTV and Director of ESRC Centre for Population Change
, Chair of the Migration Advisory Committee, Director of the Centre for Economic Performance’s research programme on Community
, Professor of Sociology and Director of the Keele Institute for Social Inclusion
, Professor of Economics and Public Policy at King’s College London
Jane is Professor of Demography and International Social Policy, Dean of the Faculty of Social, Human and Mathematical Sciences at the ÃÛÌÒTV and Director of ESRC Centre for Population Change. Demographic change and its consequences for the distribution of social and economic welfare is a consistent theme throughout all her research.
Athina is Associate Professor in Gerontology within Social Sciences: Ageing/Gerontology at the ÃÛÌÒTV. Her research interests broadly combine the areas of ageing, gender and social policy.
Jakub is Associate Professor in Demography within Social Statistics & Demography at the ÃÛÌÒTV. His research interests focus on the methods for dealing with the uncertainty of demographic phenomena, in particular surrounding migration and the demography of armed conflict.
Paul is Associate Professor in Social Policy within Sociology at the ÃÛÌÒTV. Much of his most recent work has been on pension policy and politics. He also has longstanding interests in the more general politics of policy-making.
Traute is Professor of Social Policy within Social Sciences at the ÃÛÌÒTV. Her work contributes to comparative welfare state research in Europe, and it explores in particular the role of private agents as social policy players in European pension regimes.
Héctor is Reader in Economics at the ÃÛÌÒTV. His research interests lay in the interplay of expectations and information in individual behaviour under uncertainty, as applied to the stock market, firms in international trade and migration. The analysis of coordination pitfalls in financial markets: causes and, consequences for the macroeconomy.
Corrado is Associate Professor of Economics at the ÃÛÌÒTV, where he is also an Associate Researcher within the ESRC Centre for Population Change. The focus of his research is the study of the economic determinants and effects of migration.
"Will EU migrants stay or leave the UK after Brexit?"
Derek is Head of Social Sciences at the ÃÛÌÒTV. His current research interests involve the impact of migration on Polish families in the UK, the focusing on education, migration locations, access to social housing, managing family relationships at a distance and accelerated life course transitions amongst younger Polish migrants in the UK.
The UK in a Changing Europe promotes rigorous, high-quality and independent research into the complex and ever changing relationship between the UK and the EU.
The ESRC Centre for Population Change was established in January 2009, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council it is the UK's first research centre on population change.
Our core aim is to 'change the world for the better' by engaging policymakers with evidence produced at the ÃÛÌÒTV.