Customer services β€’ Sales β€’ Technical support | 0203 475 7050 | Local call rate

Deportation Update 2023

Speaker: Amanda Jones
Date: Autumn 2023

Immigration

Amanda is a specialist in immigration and public law. She has advised and appeared in numerous immigration matters in the Court of Appeal, and in the Administrative Court on appeals, judicial review and injunctions. Amanda is instructed in asylum cases, particularly in relation to Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, India, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Sri Lanka and Saudi Arabia. She also deals with entry clearance work, including the points-based system, visitors, and family reunion, deportation appeals in relation to criminal convictions or alleged terrorist connections, and cases in which a threat to national security is alleged.

In this presentation Amanda presents an update on the regimes impacting people who are not British citizens who are considered for deportation. She highlights the mechanics of 3 regimes that are geared to address people in different situations. These different regimes concern EEA citizens and their family members where criminal conduct took place before 11pm on 31st December 2020, EEA nationals and their families after this date, and those who are not UK or EEA nationals or their family members.

Β 

Key words/topics:

EEA Citizens

Deportation

UK Nationals

Immigration Rules and the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 (as amended)

First Tier Tribunal for non-EEA citizens

The EEA Regulations 2016

European Union (Withdrawal Agreement) Act 2020

The Grace Period Regulations 2020

Arranz (EEA Regulations – deportation – test) [2017] UKUT 294 (IAC)

Decisions taken on grounds of public policy, public security and public health 27. – (5)

Proportionality

Essa (2013) at [34])

Directive and the 2006 EEA Regulations

Dumliauskas at [46] and [54]

Post-brexit

First Tier Tribunal Procedure Rules

The UK Borders Act 2007 s.32(5)

Immigration Rules and the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 (as amended).

Lawful residence

Obstacles to integration

Family life exceptions

KO (Nigeria) v SSHD [2018] UKSC 53

Don’t forget that all our seminars across

CRIME, FAMILY, HOUSING, IMMIGRATION, UNITY

One Simple Subscription
Β£155 Per Person Per Year.

Buy Now!