“I Felt So Stuck”
Inadequate Housing and Social Support for Families Seeking Asylum in the United Kingdom
                              In July 2024, a new UK government was elected, following more than a decade of backsliding on human rights and undermining of the international rules-based order by the outgoing government. The incoming government inherited a host of human rights challenges. The cost of living and inadequate social protections threaten the rights of people on low incomes, including to food and housing. Laws criminalizing protest undermine democratic rights. The new government withdrew the offshore UK-Rwanda asylum plan and resumed processing claims domestically; however, legislation violating refugee rights remain. Restoring the UK’s international standing and ability to promote human rights globally requires improvement to its domestic rights record and action to address its violation of rights in colonial contexts, including against the Chagossian people.
            Inadequate Housing and Social Support for Families Seeking Asylum in the United Kingdom
                              Independence, Legal Aid, Appeals Rights Needed to Provide Effective Remedy
                              UK and US Forced Displacement of the Chagossians and Ongoing Colonial Crimes
                              Families in Temporary Accommodation in London, UK
                              Support Unified, Rights-Based Approach for Colonial Era Crimes
                              
                              
                              Avoid Complicity in Abuse of Migrant Workers, Others
                              Refugee Children Need Care, Not Algorithms
                              Stronger Checks on Club Owners Amid Global Rise in Sportswashing
                              Support Cut in Half for Many with Disabilities and Health Conditions
                              Proposed Benefit Cuts Will Worsen Poverty and Undermine Rights
                              If the UK has any spine on Gaza, it must at least use its political leverage and impose a total arms embargo on Israel, writes Yasmine Ahmed.