Abstract

The European Union membership referendum (i.e. the Brexit referendum) in the United Kingdom in 2016 triggered a process of introspection among non-British European Union citizens with respect to their right to remain in the United Kingdom, including their right to entry, permanent residence, and access to work and social welfare. Drawing on interview data collected from 42 European Union nationals, namely Finnish and Polish migrants living in Scotland, we explore how European Union migrants’ decision-making and strategies for extending their stay in the United Kingdom, or returning to their country of origin, are shaped by and, in turn, shape their belonging and ties to their current place of residence and across state borders. In particular, we draw on the concept of embedding, which is used in migration studies to explain migration trajectories and decision-making. Our key argument is that more attention needs to be paid to the socio-political context within which migrants negotiate their embedding. To this end, we employ the term ‘politics of embedding’ to highlight the ways in which the embedding of non-British European Union citizens has been politicized and hierarchically structured in the United Kingdom after the Brexit referendum. By illustrating how the context of Brexit has changed how people evaluate their social and other attachments, and how their embedding is differentiated into ‘ties that bind’ and ‘ties that count’, we contribute to the emerging work on migration and Brexit, and specifically to the debate on how the politicization of migration shapes the sense of security on the one hand, and belonging, on the other.

Highlights

  • In June 2016, the European Union (EU) referendum took place in the United Kingdom (UK) and 52% of the voters supported the bid to leave the EU

  • The following analytical sections explore how Finnish and Polish migrants discussed their embedding in Scottish society vis-a-vis their intentions and ability to remain in the UK if/when it leaves the EU by focusing on what we propose to frame as the politics of embedding in the context of Brexit

  • This article aligns with the body of work which argues that the Brexit referendum set in motion a process of introspection for EU migrants regarding their attachments, ties and positioning in the UK as well as elsewhere (Guma and Dafydd Jones, 2019; Miller, 2019; Ranta and Nancheva, 2019)

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Summary

Introduction

In June 2016, the European Union (EU) referendum (i.e. the Brexit referendum) took place in the United Kingdom (UK) and 52% of the voters supported the bid to leave the EU. For British citizens, the outcome of the referendum provoked outbursts of emotions, including surprise, the flush of victory, fear, anxiety and anger. Among non-British EU citizens who lived in the country at the time of the referendum, the result generated a sense of shock, disbelief and dislocation (Browning, 2018; Ranta and Nancheva, 2019). Many felt that their lives as they knew them had been profoundly affected and their right to live in the UK was under threat (Guma and Dafydd Jones, 2019). EU citizens were compelled to rethink their futures with regard to the possibility to stay in the UK and their willingness to do so (Botterill et al, 2019; Lulle et al, 2019)

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