af Eve Dickson | 1 aug 2023
There are around 1.376 million people with time-limited ‘leave to remain’ who are subject to the ‘no recourse to public funds’ (NRPF) condition in the UK (Fernandez-Reino, 2020), while a further 674,000 undocumented people have NRPF by default (Jolly et al., 2020)....
af Eve Dickson | 27 jun 2023
Report by Eve Dickson and Rachel Rosen, University College London Read report here.
af Eve Dickson | 25 okt 2021
In our research for Migrants and Solidarities on ‘Dispersal and deservingness in Northern England’, Mette Louise Berg and I have been working collaboratively with a team of co-researchers who have lived experience of the asylum system. Early on in our group...
af Eve Dickson | 18 feb 2021
Most discussions of the UK’s ‘No Recourse to Public Funds’ immigration rule would suggest that its origins lie in the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999. The current iteration of the policy, which prevents people ‘subject to immigration control’ from accessing most...
af Eve Dickson | 23 dec 2020
Eve Dickson and Rachel Rosen (2020) “Punishing Those Who Do the Wrong Thing”: Enforcing Destitution and Debt through the Uk’s Family Migration Rules. Critical Social Policy (online first) In 2012, the ‘no recourse to public funds’ (NRPF) condition was...