In 2012, new and restrictive spousal reunification laws were implemented in the UK. EU free movement rules however have enabled British citizens to circumvent those restrictions by residing for a period in another Member State, and then returning with their family member to the UK. The article examines the resulting tension between national and EU law. It explores use of the Surinder Singh route (named after the court case which established the rule) against a background in which a much wider group of British citizens than previously are now ineligible for family reunification under national laws. The route is perceived as a threat to government authority in a critical area of national sovereignty, as demonstrated by its invocation in the...
Marriage migration is a controversial and problematic issue in the UK as elsewhere in Europe. This t...
Published online: 02 May 2018Moving beyond short-term public opinion accounts for Brexit this articl...
Intra-EU migrants have traditionally faced few pressures or incentives to formalize their “permanent...
In 2012, new and restrictive spousal reunification laws were implemented in the UK. EU free movement...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis (Routle...
PhD Thesis.Since the beginning of free movement, the right of EU citizens to live in the host Member...
From the mid 1960s until 1997 immigration policy was largely concerned with curbing nonwhite immigra...
Brexit presents a similar policy dilemma to that of the ending of Commonwealth immigration in the 19...
Immigration was a major point of debate and disagreement in the United Kingdom (UK) during the 2016 ...
‘All you need is love and £18,600’: Class and the new UK family migration rules A l A S i r r i y e ...
This article analyzes the political impact of the European Court of Justice’s (ECJ) case law concern...
Policy ‘All you need is love and £18,600’: Class and the new UK family migration rules A l A S i r r...
The article (presented in a preliminary version during an international conference, following a comp...
Abstract Given the emphasis, at the time of the 2016 referendum, on the need to take ...
From the Introduction. The question of when EU citizens should be able to work, live, and claim bene...
Marriage migration is a controversial and problematic issue in the UK as elsewhere in Europe. This t...
Published online: 02 May 2018Moving beyond short-term public opinion accounts for Brexit this articl...
Intra-EU migrants have traditionally faced few pressures or incentives to formalize their “permanent...
In 2012, new and restrictive spousal reunification laws were implemented in the UK. EU free movement...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis (Routle...
PhD Thesis.Since the beginning of free movement, the right of EU citizens to live in the host Member...
From the mid 1960s until 1997 immigration policy was largely concerned with curbing nonwhite immigra...
Brexit presents a similar policy dilemma to that of the ending of Commonwealth immigration in the 19...
Immigration was a major point of debate and disagreement in the United Kingdom (UK) during the 2016 ...
‘All you need is love and £18,600’: Class and the new UK family migration rules A l A S i r r i y e ...
This article analyzes the political impact of the European Court of Justice’s (ECJ) case law concern...
Policy ‘All you need is love and £18,600’: Class and the new UK family migration rules A l A S i r r...
The article (presented in a preliminary version during an international conference, following a comp...
Abstract Given the emphasis, at the time of the 2016 referendum, on the need to take ...
From the Introduction. The question of when EU citizens should be able to work, live, and claim bene...
Marriage migration is a controversial and problematic issue in the UK as elsewhere in Europe. This t...
Published online: 02 May 2018Moving beyond short-term public opinion accounts for Brexit this articl...
Intra-EU migrants have traditionally faced few pressures or incentives to formalize their “permanent...