Citations:Brexitism

English citations of Brexitism

Noun: "the political and economic philosophies associated with Brexit"

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  • 2018, John Kinsella & Russell West-Pavlov, Temporariness: On the Imperatives of Place, page 239:
    As one who was an economic migrant, who migrated under the opportunities of the EU prior to Brexitism, I thought he'd be sympathetic.
  • 2018, John Sutherland, The Good Brexiteers Guide to English Lit, unnumbered page:
    As a warning, I suggest, as an example of Brexitism gone a prejudice too far.
  • 2019, Peter A. G. van Bergeijk, Deglobalization 2.0: Trade and Openness During the Great Depression and the Great Recession, page 1:
    We seem to live in the times of Trumpism, Brexitism and deglobalization.
  • 2019, Alfdaniels Mabingo, "Teaching African Dances as Civic Engagement: Pedagogic Perspectives of Teachers of African Dances in North America, Europe, New Zealand, and Asia", in Dance Education and Responsible Citizenship: Promoting Civic Engagement Through Effective Dance Pedagogies (ed. Karen Schupp), page 25:
    However, the work of Buck and Meiners (2017) is being threatened by the continuing obsession with segregative nativism in Western society, which has manifested itself in Trumpism and Brexitism (Rowe et al. 2018).
  • 2019, Bruce Kapferer & Dimitrios Theodossopoulos, "Introduction: Populism and Its Paradox", in Democracy's Paradox: Populism and Its Contemporary Crisis (eds. Bruce Kapferer & Dimitrios Theodossopoulos), page 17:
    Writing at the end of the first decade of this century, she indirectly predicted what we understand today as Trumpism or Brexitism and its relationship with the anger of everyday citizens towards financial elites and transnational corporatism (cf. Comaroff and Comaroff 2001).
  • 2019, Renia, quoted in Alina Rezepnikowska, Convivial Cultures in Multicultural Cities: Polish Migrant Women in Manchester and Barcelona, unnumbered page:
    Yes, or even worse, people of every nationality would have behaved in a similar way to the media-inspired Brexitism.
  • 2019, Ivan Rogers, 9 Lessons In Brexit, unnumbered page:
    In another lecture, I described Brexitism as a revolutionary phenomenon, which radicalised as time went on and was now devouring its own children.
  • 2019, Thomas Schultz, "Legitimacy Pragmatism in Internation Arbitration: A Framework for Analysis", in Evolution and Adaptation The Future of International Arbitration (eds. Jean Kalicki & Mohamed Abdel Raouf), unnumbered page:
    To risk a brutal parallel, Trumpism and Brexitism face a much lower definitional duty in their arguments that the established order is illegitimate (contestation) than the opposite arguments that it is legitimate (justification).
  • 2020, Elke Krasny, "Hysteria Activism: Feminist Collectives for the Twenty-First Century", in Performing Hysteria (ed. Johanna Krasny), page 130:
    Be it Brexitism, Trumpianism, Hindu Nationalism, or the Austrian Far Right, each locale where hysteria collectives have formed suffers from the attacks of violent othering rooted in the ideology of hate.
  • 2021, Rob Atkinson, "The Proper Relationship of Private Philanthropy and the Liberal Democratic State: The Inquiry and the Inquirers as the Answer", in The Routledge Handbook of Taxation and Philanthropy (eds. Giedre Lideikyte Huber & Henry Peter), unnumbered page:
    We now have its farcical second repetition, the triumph of Trumpism in the United States and Brexitism in the United Kingdom, the rejection of the ethos of the Marshall Planners.
  • 2021, Mary Kaldor & Sabine Selchow, "Planetary Politics: Reviving the Spirit of the Concept 'Global Civil Society'", in Civil Society Essays in Honor of Helmut K. Anheier (eds. Alexander Ruser, Michael Hoelscher, Regina A. List, & Stefan Toepler), page 201:
    The rise of new political phenomena that take the national outlook to extremes, like Trumpism or Brexitism, draws attention to the contradictions of the term—and the problematic character of externalization.
  • 2021, Oscar Mazzoleni, "Regionalism and Euroscepticism: The case of Ticino", in Switzerland-EU Relations: Lessons for the UK After Brexit? (eds. Oscar Mazzoleni & Paolo Dardanelli), unnumbered page:
    At some stage, Brexitism will have to face this question.
  • 2021, David Rae, "Conceptualising Learning in Minorities Entrepreneurship", in 'The Palgrave Handbook of Minority Entrepreneurship (ed. Thomas M. Cooney), page 414:
    This continues to be manifested in such political movements as Trumpism and Brexitism.
  • 2022, Bernard Porter, Britain's Contested History: Lessons for Patriots, page ix:
    You don't have to base your 'Brexitism' on a view of British history, of course – there are plenty of other good arguments for it – but if you want to, it may be worthwhile you.
  • 2022 October 20, Jonathan Freedland, “Truss has discredited high-octane, free-market economics - perhaps for ever”, in The Guardian[1]:
    With breathtaking speed, Truss has discredited a more recent political project, one we might call Brexitism: the view that reality, including the laws of economic gravity, can be wished away, so long as you screw your eyes tight shut and believe. [] The fact that those warning voices were vindicated so fully and so quickly should deal Brexitism a fatal blow.