1st Edition

Religion and Euroscepticism in Brexit Britain

By Ekaterina Kolpinskaya, Stuart Fox Copyright 2021
    138 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    138 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Religion has a significant effect on how Europeans feel about the European Union (EU) and has had an important impact on how people voted in the UK’s ‘Brexit referendum’. This book provides a clear and accessible quantitative study of how religion affects Euroscepticism and political behaviour.

    It examines how religion has affected support for EU membership since the UK joined the European Economic Community, through to the announcement of the Brexit referendum in 2013, to the referendum itself in 2016. It also explores how religion continues to affect attitudes towards the EU post-Brexit. The volume provides valuable insights into why the UK voted to leave the EU. Furthermore, it highlights how religion affects the way that citizens throughout Europe assess the benefits, costs and values associated with EU membership, and how this may influence public opinion regarding European integration in the future.

    This timely book will be of important interest to academics and students focusing on religion and public attitudes, contemporary European and British politics as well as think tanks, interest groups and those with an interest in understanding Brexit.

    1. The missing link: religion and British politics  2. Theorising religion and Euroscepticism  3. Euroscepticism and religion before Brexit  4. Religion and the Brexit referendum  5. Untangling (in)direct effects of religion on Euroscepticism  6. Cushioning the blow: religion and party politics in the age of Brexit  7. Concluding thoughts

    Biography

    Ekaterina Kolpinskaya is Lecturer in British Politics at the University of Exeter, UK.

    Stuart Fox is Lecturer in British Politics at Brunel University London, UK.