The Citizens Advice and Law Centre services across Leeds, Bradford and Airedale are leading providers of advice and information, supporting tens of thousands of clients every year. We are now looking to recruit an ambitious individual to join our growing team as part of a planned expansion of the immigration...
The Migration Advisory Committee has published its report looking at how companies use immigration routes to recruit IT and engineering workers, after the Home Office asked that publication was delayed until after the immigration white paper. The overview states: We support the idea of regularly reviewing occupations or sectors, especially...
The Court of Appeal has once again asked the Home Office to please do something about the state of Appendix EU. The context this time was trying to understand what the rules say about the definition of a durable partner. The case is Mustaj v Secretary of State for the...
Welcome to the weekly Free Movement newsletter! The fallout from the white paper continues, unsurprising given the almost total lack of clarity in it. The Independent Monitoring Authority has had to put out a statement reassuring those with leave under the EUSS. By the looks of immigration message boards, MPs’...
In this post, we will look at who is eligible to apply under Appendix Child Relative (Sponsors with Protection) of the immigration rules, what are the requirements, what leave is granted if successful and routes to settlement. Appendix Child Relative (Sponsors with Protection) is a relatively niche route for children...
This guide outlines the steps UK employers and their foreign national employees should take when a visa is approaching expiry and a new immigration application is pending. I’ve co-written this with my employment specialist colleague Gillian Moore, because often there is a real tension between the advice an employee may...
In the face of an ongoing legal aid crisis meaning that far too many people are now having to navigate the appeal process without a lawyer, the Upper Tribunal has stated that it “cannot afford excessive indulgence for non-compliance with the requirements of the rules” by litigants in person (or...
Sponsoring a foreign worker isn’t cheap. Application fees and visa taxes typically run to thousands of pounds. Some of the fees are levied directly on the employer, while others fall on the worker applying for the visa. Many employers cover them all rather than leaving the worker to pay substantial...
Salary: £34,650 – £41,500 gross per annum at 1.0 FTE. Working pattern: 1.0 FTE (37.5 hrs per week), or 0.9 or 0.8 FTE. Flexible working requests will be considered. Contract: Permanent with a 6 months probationary period Team: UK Legal Team Location: This role can be hybrid, or office based....
The latest quarterly immigration and asylum statistics have been published, covering the period January to March 2025. The asylum backlog is down, but that is fairly meaningless given how atrocious decision making is at the moment, those cases are now the First-tier Tribunal’s problem. Syrians seeking asylum in the UK...
We often get questions about how to become an Immigration Advice Authority (or ‘IAA’, previously known as the Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner or OISC) adviser so in this detailed article we pulled together everything useful we can think of into one place for you. The short version is...
The Supreme Court has upheld a decision of the Court of Appeal, which had agreed with the Special Immigration Appeals Commission’s decision to dismiss an appeal against deprivation of British citizenship and an application for entry clearance by a woman in Syria. The case is U3 v Secretary of State...
Welcome to the weekly Free Movement newsletter! It has been a busy week and there is a lot I want to mention. First of all, the Legal Aid Agency announced this morning that it has come under cyber attack and the perpetrators have “accessed a large amount of information relating...
The Immigration Advice Authority (formerly OISC) has published an updated version of their guidance note on supervision. The note covers supervising someone who wants to move to a higher advice or increase their competencies, supervising trainee advisers working at level 1 under supervision, the different types of supervisor – principal...
An unhappy Court of Appeal has warned against the “the type of informal case expansion that was deprecated by this Court in R (Talpada) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2018] EWCA Civ 841” and reminded litigants of the need to make formal applications when wanting to amend...
The Court of Appeal has upheld a decision of the Upper Tribunal to allow the Home Secretary’s appeal against a First-tier Tribunal decision allowing the appeal of a Vietnamese national on humanitarian protection grounds. The court held that the First-tier Tribunal had not given sufficient reasons for finding the appellant...
The cost of making an immigration or nationality application has risen extremely steeply. Annual increases of 20% or 25% per year have become standard, but now we’re seeing increases of 120%. An example is the Certificate of Sponsorship fee, which rose from £239 to £525 on 9 April 2025. The current...
The immigration white paper contains broad changes affecting swathes of UK immigration policy, including workers, students, family, settlement, citizenship and asylum. Here I look at the changes affecting higher education and the student’s journey. Why they are making changes The government is concerned about certain recent trends in student migration. These include...
The foreword to the white paper contained little affirmation of the legitimate reasons employers have for recruiting from overseas, or of the contribution many skilled migrants have made to the UK. The Prime Minister made a decision to refer to high levels of inward migration as causing ‘incalculable damage’, and the...
We are looking for an experienced Immigration Solicitor to join our highly successful, creative, and dynamic immigration team. The Migrant and Refugee Children’s Legal Unit at Islington Law Centre has a much-respected Immigration Team. We are a category 1 Legal Aid Immigration provider and we have considerable experience across the...
Welcome to the weekly Free Movement newsletter! The government’s long awaited (and dreaded?) white paper on immigration has been published today, following a weekend of some fairly grim language from ministers, including the PM (I think the “lab” analogy in particular was vile). Solidarity with all of my fellow migrants...
Thank you to everyone who attended our webinar, ‘The “Self-Sponsorship” route for overseas businesses establishing a UK presence’. We had a fantastic turnout and received a huge number of thoughtful questions (nearly 100!). Time constraints made it impossible to answer all questions live, but our host Paolo Barbato has kindly...
This morning I did a quick post to let everyone know that the immigration white paper had been published, along with the summary recommendations from the paper. Let’s now take a closer look at what is being proposed for workers and students. I have looked separately at the rest of...
The immigration white paper has been published containing proposals for future legislation. The summarised proposals from the paper are set out in full below. We have also published a more detailed look at the proposals affecting work and student routes and a separate look at the rest of the proposals,...
It was a relatively quiet April ahead of what looks to be a busy May. Sonia is joined by Andrew again this month. Sonia runs through the amendments made at committee stage of the Border Security, Asylum and Immigration one and despaired over the lack of attention given to the...
The Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill has completed its committee stage in the House of Commons and report stage will take place on Monday 12 May 2025. The Bill as first introduced has had a couple of amendments at committee stage, both introduced by the government. There are also...
The Home Secretary has had an absolute howler in the Upper Tribunal, it is one of those decisions that is worth a read in full if you have the time. It is a successful judicial review challenging a refusal to recognise further submissions as amounting to a fresh claim. This...
Welcome to the weekly Free Movement newsletter! Last week I saw an asylum refusal letter that referred to the wrong country of origin. Most lawyers will have seen one of those. So I do understand the “it can’t possibly be worse than current decision making” responses to last week’s announcement...
The Court of Appeal has considered in Ackom v SSHD [2025] EWCA Civ 537 an appeal by a German national against deportation. The key point of contention was whether Mr Ackom would face ‘very significant obstacles to integration’ upon removal to Germany. The court considered the Kamara test in the...
Following the recent roll out of the new Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) regime for non-visa nationals, there has emerged an apparent discrepancy between some of the suitability requirements in the ETA rules and the visitor rules. This is relevant because it could, at least in theory, lead to cases of...
The Unity Project has published a short new report looking at issues surrounding eVisas and the no recourse to public funds conditions. The main problem is that when people have made a successful change of conditions application and the Home Office has sent a letter stating that the no recourse...
The Court of Appeal has dismissed an appeal by an Albanian women in a protection claim where she initially succeeded in the First-tier Tribunal but that decision was later overturned by the Upper Tribunal. Her asylum claim was based on a risk on return from former clients of her husband’s...
An appellant has lost his appeal against a refusal by the Immigration Advice Authority (formerly OISC) to raise his level of registration from level 1 to level 3 without taking the online test. The case is Scerrato v Immigration Services Commissioner [2025] UKFTT 454 (GRC). The appellant took the level...
A Youth Mobility visa enables people aged 18-30 (or 35 for some countries) to live and work in the UK, usually for up to two years. It used to be called the “working holiday-maker scheme” and some people may still call it that. Crucially, there is no requirement to have...
This post is intended for refugees (including those with humanitarian protection), their families and their friends trying to understand the rules on refugee family reunion. The requirements to be met are fairly straightforward and simple for children and partners who existed at the time the refugee fled their country of origin. These...