• 10 May 2026

    UK Migration — The Cohesion Frame

    One of seven companion framings to the master document, applying the same evidence base from a community-cohesion perspective. Pace of change matters more than scale; integration outcomes vary by route; residential concentration creates parallel lives; English language is a genuine cohesion variable; the political backlash is itself a cohesion variable. The framing is presented at full strength, with the cases against it acknowledged openly.

  • 10 May 2026

    UK Migration — The Protection Frame

    One of seven companion framings to the master document, applying the same evidence base from a refugee-protection perspective. Grant rates from current high-volume small-boat-arrival nationalities are mostly very high (Sudan 96%, Eritrea 88%); the protection frame asks what the evidence implies if international protection obligations are taken as the starting point rather than as a constraint. Presented at full strength.

  • 10 May 2026

    UK Migration — The Demographic Frame

    One of seven companion framings to the master document, applying the same evidence base from a demographic-sustainability perspective. Population structure, dependency ratios, OBR sustainability modelling, and what the demographic frame implies for migration policy at scale. Presented at full strength, including where it cuts against restrictionist intuitions and where it cuts against expansionist intuitions.

  • 10 May 2026

    UK Migration — The AI Labour-Market Frame

    One of seven companion framings, the most rapidly evolving evidence base in the document. AI is currently displacing high-paid white-collar work faster than low-paid migrant-dependent sectors. The King's College London October 2025 study found firms with high AI exposure cut total employment 4.5% and junior positions 5.8% (2021-2025). The AI frame complicates restrictionist assumptions about automation replacing migrant labour and supports adaptive sectoral planning. Presented at full strength.

  • 10 May 2026

    UK Migration — The Public-Service Capacity Frame

    One of seven companion framings, applying the same evidence base from a public-service-capacity perspective. School places, GP registrations, social housing, and local-government finances. The capacity frame is concerned with absorption rate at the level of individual local authorities, not with national totals; it produces different policy weightings from any frame that operates only at national scale.

  • 10 May 2026

    UK Migration — The Emigration Frame

    One of seven companion framings, applying the same evidence base from a British-citizen-outflow perspective. Net migration is inflows minus outflows; the emigration frame asks what is happening to the outflow side, who is leaving the UK, what their fiscal contribution profile looks like, and what the implications are for net contribution and skills retention. The frame is under-discussed in the public debate and produces distinctive policy weightings.

  • 10 May 2026

    UK Migration — The Sovereignty Frame

    One of seven companion framings, applying the same evidence base from a post-Brexit sovereignty perspective. The sovereignty frame asks not whether the UK can control its borders but what controlling them is being used for, what international commitments constrain it, and what trade-offs are visible only when sovereignty is the priority lens. Presented at full strength, including the cases for and against ECHR withdrawal.

← All topics  ·  Chronological archive