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Free Movement

Immigration update podcast, episode 80

25 min • 11 september 2020

Welcome to episode 80 of the Free Movement immigration update podcast. This month we start with the EU Settlement Scheme before turning to a couple of cases at the intersection of immigration law and family law. With the slow down in the court system, there wasn’t a whole lot of case law this month, so we take a detour via domestic abuse and sponsor licensing before getting back to the courts with a few cases on procedure and compensation for delay. To round off, there’s a couple of positive developments on legal aid and leave to remain for people falsely accused of cheating on their English test.
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 100 CPD hours of training materials available to members. You can find all the available courses here. With the end of the CPD year approaching, it’s worth mentioning we have three new training courses already available — on Tier 2 visas, international surrogacy cases and best practice in immigration case working — and two more incoming on advising employers and on lawyer ethics. As with blog posts, we’re widening the pool of training courses authors and these are by Karma Hickman of Bishop & Sewell, Jo Hunt of Lewis Silkin, Amie Higgins of the Anti-Trafficking and Labour Exploitation Unit and Chris Cole, formerly of Parker Rhodes Hickmotts.
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 downloadable 24-minute podcast follows the running order below. Time codes indicate when a particular section begins.
EU rights
EU Settlement Scheme rejects majority of Zambrano carers
Useful briefing on changes to Northern Ireland family immigration rules
Easier access to benefits for family members of people from Northern Ireland
Family law (6.11)
Court of Appeal backs order to disclose refugee asylum records
Local authorities may need permission to get British citizenship for children in care
Domestic abuse (12.55)
The domestic violence concession: for the few, not the many
Sponsorship (14.49)
Brexit ready? No big rise in businesses getting sponsor licences
Delay (16.57)
No Home Office duty of care to mig...
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