Since the landmark 2010 Supreme Court judgment in which it was ruled the Home Office could not tell LGBTI asylum-seekers that they could go back to their country of origin and ‘live discreetly’, the Home Office has shifted its tactics in refusing asylum claims.
read more

Radical funding for radical change: Edge Fund looking for migrant members
A guest post from Sophie Pritchard of Edge Fund Edge Fund is a grant-making organisation that funds individuals and small groups working to challenge injustice… Read more »
read more
Campaign for Isabella Acevedo, Mark Harper MP’s former cleaner
– Snatched at daughter’s wedding by Immigration raid – Deported to Colombia – Campaign for justice continues Isabella Acevedo, former cleaner for Mark Harper… Read more »
read more
Residence Test found to be unlawful by High Court
Great news! This week, a timely and scathing judgment by a rare three-judge Divisional Court in PLP v Secretary of State for Justice, ruled that the atrocious “residence test” is unlawful. Lord Justice Moses led the judgment, finding that it was not within the Justice Secretary’s power to introduce the residence test, and that its blatantly discriminatory intentions and effects are unjustified.
read more
Residence Test, Impact of Latest Legal Aid Cuts, Minimum Income Judgment – an Update
This post will give a round up on some of the latest significant legal aid and immigration news, focussing on the residence test, the evident, grim impact of LASPO 2012, and the Home Secretary’s win over minimum income requirements in the Court of Appeal.
read more
Legal Aid update: House of Commons votes for Residence Test
When the latest wave of legal aid changes was proposed last year, the residence test was immediately one of the top concerns (see September blog… Read more »
read more
Detained Fast Track asylum system ruled unlawful by High Court
In a wonderful, landmark judgement, the High Court has ruled that the UK Home Office has been illegally operating the Detained Fast Track asylum system.… Read more »
read more
Campaign against detention: protest at Harmondsworth, Sat 5 July
This Saturday, 5 July, there will be another protest against immigration detention. The demonstration at Harmondsworth is organised by Movement for Justice, in solidarity with… Read more »
read more
Berlin: refugee roof-top protest
Refugees have taken to the rooftop of an abandoned school building in Berlin to protest the attempt to evict them from their home. As police… Read more »
read more
“Am I a HUMAN BEING? I ran from my country to save my life” – Marie Therese finally gets right to remain in the UK
Many of you will remember the campaign for Marie Therese Nana, a survivor of ritualised torture in Cameroon. Marie Therese wrote, movingly and powerfully, about… Read more »
read more
Campaigning for migration justice – it’s not all over after forced removal
By Evelina Gambino, Right to Remain volunteer What happens after removal? Such is the question that many people involved in campaigns for the right to… Read more »
read more
Groundswell of popular action against detention
For those who despair that the outrage of immigration detention continues – seemingly unchallenged – in the UK, hope may be at hand. Those of us… Read more »
read moreSupport our work
When people reach the UK, the struggle isn’t over. It's a hostile environment. Right to Remain relies on grants from charitable trusts and on donations from people like you. Your donation will help us to help people in their struggles for the right to remain in the UK, and to campaign for migration justice.
Donate todayAbout us
Right to Remain works with communities, groups and organisations across the UK, providing information, resources, training and assistance to help people to establish their right to remain, and to challenge injustice in the immigration and asylum system. Right to Remain is a registered charity (charity number 1192934).
Read more