About Us
Records
Procedures etc.
Procedures
COE
Extension
Change
Authorized Employment
Activities not permitted
Refugee etc.
Special Permission to Stay
Permanent Resident
Statuses of residence
Engineer
Student
Dependent
SSW(i)
SSW(ii)
Spouse or Child of Japanese
Spouse or Child of Permanent Resident
Long Term Resident
Designated Activities
Skilled Labor
Business Manager
Intra-company Transferee
Instructor
Nursing Care
Professor
Religious Activities
Technical intern(i)(a)
Technical intern(ii)(a)
Technical intern(iii)(a)
Technical intern(i)(b)
Technical intern(ii)(b)
Technical intern(iii)(b)
HSP(i)(a)
HSP(i)(b)
HSP(i)(c)
HSP(ii)
Cultural Activities
Medical
Entertainer
Researcher
Trainee
Artist
Journalist
Legal/Accounting
Articles
News
News(Japan)
News(Overseas)
Fee
Access
Inquiry
FAQ (
Service
SSW
Engineer
Others
)
Form
World Immigration News
Nishiyama Immigration Service
>
World Immigration News
Bevan Foundation warns of collapse in immigration legal advice in Wales and calls for a comprehensive recovery plan
Release Date
2025-05-29
Media
Electronic Immigration Network
Summary
The Bevan Foundation has published a report highlighting the near-collapse of immigration legal services in Wales. The report describes Wales as an "advice desert," with a severe shortage of legal aid providers—dropping from 15 to just 6 since 2018. The largest provider’s withdrawal left hundreds of cases unrepresented. Asylum seekers are increasingly being dispersed to areas without any legal support, particularly in rural and northern Wales.
Based on testimonies from around 60 individuals, the report outlines systemic failures, including missed appeals, poor representation, and exploitation due to unregulated advisors. These issues contribute to serious outcomes like human rights breaches, homelessness, and poverty.
To address the crisis, the Foundation proposes a national strategy focused on sustainable, community-informed legal services. This includes diversified funding (government, local authorities, NHS, universities, etc.), affordable training for legal professionals, and stronger cross-sector collaboration. While remote services can help, the report emphasizes that in-person, trauma-informed support remains essential.
A new project running from May 2025 to July 2026 will map current services, identify gaps, and co-develop solutions to rebuild a resilient immigration legal aid system across Wales.
Tags
United Kingdom
News Articles including "United Kingdom"
1
2
3
4
Released on
Article Title
Tags
2024-11-28
Government restoring order to “broken” immigration system(GOV.UK)
United Kingdom
2024-11-27
Tories got immigration wrong, says Kemi Badenoch(BBC)
United Kingdom
2024-11-27
UK immigration update: Electronic Travel Authorisation scheme rollout(Farrer & Co)
United Kingdom