Call London +44(0)344-991-9222. ![]() The world’s most popular immigration advice site ● 32 Years in Business ● Established in 1988 Immigration newsletter 19 June 2013 The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development has released its 2013 migration report. It says that the level of immigration in OECD countries is rising but remains lower than it was in 2007. UK lawyers have condemned government plans to prevent many immigrants from receiving legal aid until they have lived in Britain legally for twelve months. The Civil Justice Council, an advisory board of judges and lawyers, says the plan breaks 'the fundamental principle of equality before the law' and could leave immigrants unable to bring or defend crucial claims. We can often get your UK immigration application processed within 24 hours. We have 25 years’ experience and we can help with tier 1 visa extensions, indefinite leave to remain applications and many other visas. It’s first-come-first-served so call today. The 2013 OECD report into immigration to Australia says that Australia accepted 219,500 permanent migrants in 2011/12. The majority of these were admitted under Australia’s skilled migration programme. This stream is reserved for workers and their families. Seven of the top ten source countries for migrants were in Asia. India came top, then China and the UK. In addition, 44,000 New Zealanders settled in Australia under a bilateral free movement arrangement. In 2011, over a third of babies born in the UK had one foreign-born parent. The most common birth countries were Pakistan, Poland, India and Bangladesh. 131,100 children had two foreign-born parents and 86,000 had one foreign-born parent. A new institute has been established at the UK’s Birmingham University to research into 'superdiversity'. The Institute of Research into Superdiversity, or IRIS, will carry our research into patterns in migration and contribute material to debates on migration and its consequences. CONNECT WITH US: |