25 min

Immigration update podcast, episode 59 Free Movement

    • Government

Welcome to the November 2018 edition of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we again take it from the top with the Supreme Court’s latest attempt to cut through the complexity of our immigration law before turning to a major High Court decision on trafficking. November also saw the Home Office roll out a new in-country application system, so we’ll discuss what we know about that so far. There’s then some Upper Tribunal case law on appeals, asylum and Article 3 to chew on, and we conclude on the now-infamous paragraph 322(5).



If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 40 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.

If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free via iTunes here, Stitcher here or point your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.

To access previous Free Movement immigration update podcasts click here.

The main content of the downloadable 25-minute audio podcast follows the (non chronological) order of content below:

Human rights

Supreme Court decides meaning of “precarious immigration status” and “financially independent”

Exceptional circumstances in a spouse or partner visa application under Appendix FM

Trafficking

Major court win for trafficking victims as subsistence payment cut is reversed

Procedure

The new UK in-country visa application system

Family of four face removal for failing to tick box on visa application form



Appeals law

A “new matter” includes EU law arguments

Upper Tribunal grants general permission to appeal to Afghan hijackers

Asylum

Immigration Rules on humanitarian protection conflict with EU law

Home Office “too accepting” of dire asylum accommodation, immigration inspector finds

Article 3

a href="https://freemovement.org.uk/burden-of-proof-rests-with-appellants-in-article-3-ap...

Welcome to the November 2018 edition of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we again take it from the top with the Supreme Court’s latest attempt to cut through the complexity of our immigration law before turning to a major High Court decision on trafficking. November also saw the Home Office roll out a new in-country application system, so we’ll discuss what we know about that so far. There’s then some Upper Tribunal case law on appeals, asylum and Article 3 to chew on, and we conclude on the now-infamous paragraph 322(5).



If you would like to claim CPD points for reading the material and listening to this podcast, sign up here as a Free Movement member. There are now over 40 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here.

If you listen to podcasts on your mobile phone, you can subscribe for free via iTunes here, Stitcher here or point your podcast player to the podcast feed for Free Movement. Using a mobile device and subscribing has the advantage that each new podcast can be automatically downloaded for listening to on the go.

To access previous Free Movement immigration update podcasts click here.

The main content of the downloadable 25-minute audio podcast follows the (non chronological) order of content below:

Human rights

Supreme Court decides meaning of “precarious immigration status” and “financially independent”

Exceptional circumstances in a spouse or partner visa application under Appendix FM

Trafficking

Major court win for trafficking victims as subsistence payment cut is reversed

Procedure

The new UK in-country visa application system

Family of four face removal for failing to tick box on visa application form



Appeals law

A “new matter” includes EU law arguments

Upper Tribunal grants general permission to appeal to Afghan hijackers

Asylum

Immigration Rules on humanitarian protection conflict with EU law

Home Office “too accepting” of dire asylum accommodation, immigration inspector finds

Article 3

a href="https://freemovement.org.uk/burden-of-proof-rests-with-appellants-in-article-3-ap...

25 min

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