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The British Immigration Courts

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Immigration has been a controversial and contentious area of public policy since the Commonwealth Immigration Act ended most primary immigration in 1962. This study looks in detail at the work of p...
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  • 28 July 1999
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Immigration has been a controversial and contentious area of public policy since the Commonwealth Immigration Act ended most primary immigration in 1962. This study looks in detail at the work of practioners in the court-system that hears appeals from immigrants and asylum seekers against decisions made by the British Government.

The book contains chapters about decision making in primary purpose and the asylum appeals, the administrative problems faced by successive British governments, and the perspectives of pressure groups and politicians.

The British Immigration Courts transforms our understanding of immigration as a political issue through preserving a sense of routine work in the courts, civil service and political process which is ignored or idealised by other approaches. It is essential reading for practioners, academics and students interested in current debates about policy.

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Price: $45.95
Pages: 208
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Publication Date: 28 July 1999
ISBN: 9781861341723
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / General, Ethnic groups and multicultural studies
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"Refugee law is clearly evolving. These books give us valuable insight into what this means for the rights and realities of refugees." International Affairs
Max Travers is Reader in Sociology at Buckinghamshire Chilterns University College, High Wycombe.
Contents: Introduction; Sociology and immigration; Researching a court-system; The appeals process; The primary purpose rule and the courts; Political asylum and the courts; The courts as an administrative problem; Immigration as a politcal issue; Conclusion.