Table of contents - Special Issue: BREXIT, THE TRUMP EFFECT, AND DE-GLOBALIZATION
Guest Editors: James Hartigan, Joe McMahon
Multinationals’ effects: a nearly unexplored aspect of Brexit
Claudia Fernández-Pacheco Theurer, Jose Luis López Ruiz, María C. LatorreThe purpose of this paper is to review the economic studies on Brexit, highlighting that they have focused mainly on its negative impact on trade. The economic intuition behind…
Brexit, trade and agriculture: waiting for answers
Joseph McMahonThe purpose of this paper is to examine the nature of the trading relationship in agricultural goods that the United Kingdom (UK) will have when it leaves the European Union (EU)…
Conflict, international trade and President Trump’s isolationist policies
Yusuf Ayotunde AbdulkareemThis paper draws attention to President Trump’s isolationist policies and aims to show that it is reminiscent of the era of the Smoot–Hawley Tariff of the 1930s. This paper posits…
Comparative advantage in de-globalisation: Brexit, America First and Africa’s Continental Free Trade Area
Elimma EzeaniThis paper aims to examine the relevance of the theory of comparative advantage in the present realities of a world undergoing de-globalisation, that is, a retreat from closer…
Keeping it real: Debunking the deglobalization Myth, Brexit and Trump: “lessons” on integration
Mervyn MartinThe recent vote for Britain to exit the European Union and the election of Donald Trump as the President of the USA has been described as events that bring an end to globalization…
Britain after Brexit – brief overview
Suhail AbboushiThis paper aims to examine the early aftermath of Britain’s Referendum to leave the European Union. The study addresses three areas: British public opinion and sentiment with…
ISSN:
1477-0024e-ISSN:
2045-4376ISSN-L:
1477-0024Online date, start – end:
2002Copyright Holder:
Emerald Publishing LimitedOpen Access:
hybridEditor:
- Dr James Hartigan