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@book{ MacDonald2019,
 title = {Brexit, Populism, Nationalism: Challenge of the Future},
 author = {MacDonald, Stuart},
 year = {2019},
 series = {ifa Input},
 pages = {11},
 volume = {01/2019},
 address = {Stuttgart},
 publisher = {ifa (Institut für Auslandsbeziehungen)},
 isbn = {978‐3‐921970‐05‐8},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.17901/AKBP2.01.2019},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-67934-4},
 abstract = {The Brexit process is today at a crucial stage. In the UK, it is polarising opinion and creating divisions across a number of fault lines in British society between generations, geographies of inequality, cosmopolitan liberals and more rural conservatives, communities divided by historical conflicts of religion or nationality. In the European Union, similar tensions are everywhere - at the time of writing in France, above all, with the gilets jaunes, in Andalusia with the reappearance of far‐right politics in Spain, not to mention in Hungary with the Central European University forced out of Budapest. Societies are increasingly divided among themselves and against each other. This article considers the implications of Brexit for international cultural relations in Europe. It considers the case of Brexit, recognizes that Brexit is a process, or a state of mind, rather than a single event, and that the future is still to be negotiated. It concludes by suggesting that we should aim to learn from Brexit - whatever happens will be shaped by the lessons we can apply to make a more positive future.},
 keywords = {cultural relations; EU; populism; international relations; international cultural policy; Populismus; Großbritannien; nationalism; Great Britain; Europapolitik; internationale Beziehungen; European Policy; kulturelle Beziehungen; auswärtige Kulturpolitik; Nationalismus; EU}}