The catalogue contains study descriptions in various languages. The system searches with your search terms from study descriptions available in the language you have selected. The catalogue does not have ‘All languages’ option as due to linguistic differences this would give incomplete results. See the User Guide for more detailed information.
This project collected survey and interview data to study Eurochildren, their families and their experience and responses to Brexit.
The project aims to portray the emergence of a new politics of belonging, which reconfigures discursively and legally who belongs to a post-EU Britain. It also aims to establish a baseline for future research on migration and settlement decision making in families with EU27 nationals following the formal exit of the European Union.The UK has been a member of the European Union for 40 years. Throughout that time there has been intermingling of people and institutions which can be most clearly seen in the growing number of bi- and mixed-nationality EU families in the UK and their children, many of whom born in the UK and holding a British passport. This is a growing, and yet understudied and underreported, segment of the British society. In a post-EU referendum context, where the rhetoric about curbing EU immigration has permeated political, media, and popular discourses, producing a stark 'us and them' narrative, the question left unasked and unanswered is what are the human and emotional costs of this abrupt geopolitical shift if 'us and them' are the same?
Through the study of Eurochildren and their families and their experience and responses to Brexit, the project aims to portrait the emergence of a new politics of belonging which reconfigures discursively and legally who belong to a post-EU Britain and establish a baseline for future research on migration and settlement decision making in families with EU27 nationals following the formal exit of the European Union. In order to do so, it will:
1) Profile and map the population of UK- and EU-born children of EU nationals in the UK and examine, at the aggregate level, different types of EU families and measure their socio-economic inclusion into British society.
2) Investigate how families with at least one EU27 member experience and respond to the process of exiting from the...
Terminology used is generally based on DDI controlled vocabularies: Time Method, Analysis Unit, Sampling Procedure and Mode of Collection, available at CESSDA Vocabulary Service.
Methodology
Data collection period
01/04/2017 - 30/09/2019
Country
United Kingdom
Time dimension
Not available
Analysis unit
Individual
Family
Universe
Not available
Sampling procedure
Not available
Kind of data
Text
Data collection mode
In-depth qualitative interviews with EU families in the United Kingdom after the Brexit referendum. Sampling based on historical mapping of EU population in the UK (see Lessard-Phillips and Sigona 2018: https://eurochildrenblog.files.wordpress.com/2019/10/eurochildren-brief-3-llp-ns-2.pdf) and family structure based on five-fold typology reflecting different family configurations. Interviews were carried out in England, Scotland, Norther Ireland and Wales. Follow up close question survey was carried out a year after the interviews.
Funding information
Grant number
ES/R001510/1
Access
Publisher
UK Data Service
Publication year
2020
Terms of data access
The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service. All requests are subject to the permission of the data owner or his/her nominee. Please email the contact person for this data collection to request permission to access the data, explaining your reason for wanting access to the data, then contact our Access Helpdesk.