32 min

Immigration roundup: March 2024 Free Movement

    • Government

In the March roundup, Sonia and Colin discuss the latest with Albanian cases as uncovered in the Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration's report on asylum casework. We cover articles looking at recent changes to the Ukraine schemes, as well as a reminder of the existence of Hamid cases and how to avoid being on the receiving end of a telling off from the High Court. We also recap the recent telling off that Swift J gave the government legal department, changes to work routes, costs in SIAC reviews, GPS tagging, deportation of stateless people and much more!


The 32 minute podcast follows the running order below:


Asylum (00:32)

Asylum casework inspection report reveals mishandling of cases, secret ministerial directions



How to effectively represent Albanian people seeking asylum in an increasingly difficult environment



How the changes to the Ukraine Schemes will make it more difficult for Ukrainians to come to the UK – and why they should be cancelled

 

Procedural (08:40)

Two Hamid referrals made in asylum cases where out of hours injunctions were sought


Government Legal Department told by High Court to keep “rather basic point” in mind when advising on redactions



Special Immigration Appeals Commission has the power to award costs in reviews

 

Points based system (12:40)

Statement of changes HC 590: salary thresholds increased, shortage occupation list gone


Changes to work visa routes from 4 April 2024 and what it means for employers

 

Detention (14:30)

Court finds that the Home Office’s imposition of a GPS tag was unlawful for over a year in the first case of its kind

 

Deportation (17:35)

Can a stateless person be subject to deportation proceedings?

 

EU Settlement Scheme (20:00)

Akinsanya latest: guidance on Zambrano carers found to be unlawful, Appendix EU unaffected

 

British Citizenship (22:10)

Roehrig upheld by Court of Appeal: no changes for certain children of EU citizens not entitled to British citizenship



Appellant keeps British nationality after Court of Appeal overturns dishonesty finding


General immigration (24:40)

More increases to application fees, including passports and Appendix FM

In the March roundup, Sonia and Colin discuss the latest with Albanian cases as uncovered in the Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration's report on asylum casework. We cover articles looking at recent changes to the Ukraine schemes, as well as a reminder of the existence of Hamid cases and how to avoid being on the receiving end of a telling off from the High Court. We also recap the recent telling off that Swift J gave the government legal department, changes to work routes, costs in SIAC reviews, GPS tagging, deportation of stateless people and much more!


The 32 minute podcast follows the running order below:


Asylum (00:32)

Asylum casework inspection report reveals mishandling of cases, secret ministerial directions



How to effectively represent Albanian people seeking asylum in an increasingly difficult environment



How the changes to the Ukraine Schemes will make it more difficult for Ukrainians to come to the UK – and why they should be cancelled

 

Procedural (08:40)

Two Hamid referrals made in asylum cases where out of hours injunctions were sought


Government Legal Department told by High Court to keep “rather basic point” in mind when advising on redactions



Special Immigration Appeals Commission has the power to award costs in reviews

 

Points based system (12:40)

Statement of changes HC 590: salary thresholds increased, shortage occupation list gone


Changes to work visa routes from 4 April 2024 and what it means for employers

 

Detention (14:30)

Court finds that the Home Office’s imposition of a GPS tag was unlawful for over a year in the first case of its kind

 

Deportation (17:35)

Can a stateless person be subject to deportation proceedings?

 

EU Settlement Scheme (20:00)

Akinsanya latest: guidance on Zambrano carers found to be unlawful, Appendix EU unaffected

 

British Citizenship (22:10)

Roehrig upheld by Court of Appeal: no changes for certain children of EU citizens not entitled to British citizenship



Appellant keeps British nationality after Court of Appeal overturns dishonesty finding


General immigration (24:40)

More increases to application fees, including passports and Appendix FM

32 min

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