International Migrants’ Rights in the UK from the 1998 Human Rights Act to the Big Society Concept

Since the mid-1990s the policies and the legal and regulatory instruments for refugees and asylum seekers have maintained particular groups of migrants in a state of limbo with fewer rights than the rest of the British population. The enforcement of restrictive policies has caused widespread social...

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Main Author: Catherine Puzzo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires de Rennes 2014-11-01
Series:Revue LISA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/6901
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author Catherine Puzzo
author_facet Catherine Puzzo
author_sort Catherine Puzzo
collection DOAJ
description Since the mid-1990s the policies and the legal and regulatory instruments for refugees and asylum seekers have maintained particular groups of migrants in a state of limbo with fewer rights than the rest of the British population. The enforcement of restrictive policies has caused widespread social exclusion and destitution amongst these migrants. This is all the more paradoxical since the Labour and the current coalition administrations have made the integration of their foreign population a key dimension of their migration agenda. This paper intends to review the path successive governments, including the current one, have taken to uphold human rights commitments to its foreign population notably with the incorporation of the European Convention on Human Rights while, on the other hand, pursuing increasingly restrictive policies which have left these non-nationals in a precarious situation, thereby undermining their chances of integrating successfully.
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spelling doaj-art-1a2699215f244a47afeab5f959256d022025-01-06T09:03:20ZengPresses universitaires de RennesRevue LISA1762-61532014-11-011210.4000/lisa.6901International Migrants’ Rights in the UK from the 1998 Human Rights Act to the Big Society ConceptCatherine PuzzoSince the mid-1990s the policies and the legal and regulatory instruments for refugees and asylum seekers have maintained particular groups of migrants in a state of limbo with fewer rights than the rest of the British population. The enforcement of restrictive policies has caused widespread social exclusion and destitution amongst these migrants. This is all the more paradoxical since the Labour and the current coalition administrations have made the integration of their foreign population a key dimension of their migration agenda. This paper intends to review the path successive governments, including the current one, have taken to uphold human rights commitments to its foreign population notably with the incorporation of the European Convention on Human Rights while, on the other hand, pursuing increasingly restrictive policies which have left these non-nationals in a precarious situation, thereby undermining their chances of integrating successfully.https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/6901immigrationlawUnited Kingdommigrantsasylum
spellingShingle Catherine Puzzo
International Migrants’ Rights in the UK from the 1998 Human Rights Act to the Big Society Concept
Revue LISA
immigration
law
United Kingdom
migrants
asylum
title International Migrants’ Rights in the UK from the 1998 Human Rights Act to the Big Society Concept
title_full International Migrants’ Rights in the UK from the 1998 Human Rights Act to the Big Society Concept
title_fullStr International Migrants’ Rights in the UK from the 1998 Human Rights Act to the Big Society Concept
title_full_unstemmed International Migrants’ Rights in the UK from the 1998 Human Rights Act to the Big Society Concept
title_short International Migrants’ Rights in the UK from the 1998 Human Rights Act to the Big Society Concept
title_sort international migrants rights in the uk from the 1998 human rights act to the big society concept
topic immigration
law
United Kingdom
migrants
asylum
url https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/6901
work_keys_str_mv AT catherinepuzzo internationalmigrantsrightsintheukfromthe1998humanrightsacttothebigsocietyconcept