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The Immigration and Asylum Bill 2026: cruel, costly, and completely unnecessary
By limiting the application of human rights and rolling back modern slavery protections, these proposals would lead to 6,500 more undocumented people every year, creating an underclass of precarious workers.
Read moreRead moreHow we won almost £30,000 for a sponsored care worker whose employer failed to provide any work
An employment tribunal ruling has awarded our client, Shabin Shaji, almost £30,000 after his employer denied him any work. The Home Office must take accountability for the systemic exploitation of migrant carers like him.
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A cruel legal paradox is blocking victims modern slavery from justice
Section 65(1)(b) of the Nationality and Borders Act is forcing victims of modern slavery to remain tied to their exploiters, denying them the legal security to pursue criminal prosecutions and find safety.
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Home Office enforcement against exploitative sponsors hits all-time high, but fails to protect victims
Our analysis of official immigration statistics finds that the Home Office revoked a record number of licences from businesses in 2025, as new FOI data reveals migrant worker exploitation goes far beyond care sector.
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Skilled Worker visas in ninth consecutive decline, as fewer nurses, therapists and scientists come to the UK
Restrictions to migrant workers’ rights and successive increases to employer costs have pushed new Skilled Worker visas to 2021 levels, driven by a loss of overseas healthcare, education, and trade professionals.
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