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The British Asylum System in Policy and Practice
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25 August 2026

Available open access digitally under CC-BY-NC-ND licence.
For those navigating or supporting others through the asylum system, rapidly changing rules, shifting policies, and opaque decision making can be bewildering. Guidance notes and fact sheets exist but they rarely connect technical details to the historical, political, and everyday realities shaping people’s lives.
This clear and concise guide demystifies the UK asylum process from application to post-decision outcomes, placing each stage in its wider historical and policy context. Drawing on five years of research and the latest conceptual literature, it weaves together insights from asylum law, welfare, housing, and migration studies, underpinned by conceptual frameworks of race, capital, and empire.
Featuring vivid vignettes and empirical data to bring policy to life, this book bridges theory, practice, and lived experience to show how national decisions are encountered on the ground.
‘A useful, practical, and sensitive guide to how the British asylum process works and how it is experienced by those who endure it.' Colin Yeo, barrister, writer, and campaigner in immigration law
‘This accessible and must-read guide demystifies Britain’s asylum system, exposing its racialised histories and everyday impacts while highlighting resistance, solidarity, and practical tools for navigating and challenging an increasingly hostile border regime.' Bridget Anderson, University of Bristol
Introduction
1. Where did it all begin?
2. Applying for asylum
3. Receiving a negative decision
4. Receiving a positive decision
5. What does the future hold?
6. Taking action