What is the UK’s Nationality and Borders Act? How does it relate to previous acts concerned with nationality and immigration legislation? What is the back story to some of the central changes that this act introduces? We cover all of this and more in this bumper episode to mark the start of Series 2 of Who do we think we are?
Presenter Michaela Benson introduces the Nationality and Borders Act and how this sits in a longer history of Acts which considers changes to nationality and immigration legislation alongside one another. She also joins podcast researcher George Kalivis in the archive, where they discuss the behind closed doors responses of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher about what Britain should do in respect to the resettlement of refugees from Vietnam in the 1970s and 80s. We’re joined by Trent Lamont Miller and Dave Varney of the British Overseas Territories Citizenship campaign to discuss the impetus behind this campaign and the journey to get legislation changed to allow the children of British Overseas Territories citizens born outside of marriage abroad to be entitled for this citizenship status. But as our conversation with Fizza Qureshi (CEO of Migrants Rights Network) reveals, the success of this campaign for BOTCs is bittersweet in the context of the predominantly bleak consequences of this act.
You can access the full transcripts for each episode over on the Rebordering Britain and Britons after Brexit website.
In this episode we cover …
Quote
When you have no effective safe routes to come to the UK, or where you have those routes, and they're measly, in terms of the numbers that are available to people, or they're really narrow in their scope, I mean, what other ways are people going to have to resort to, apart from getting on a boat to entering the UK?
—Fizza Qureshi, CEO Migrants Rights Network
This just makes no sense to me because my British BOTC father did not marry my foreign born mother ... every child has copies of both parents DNA, they have two sides of the family tree for the UK Government to take a pair of scissors and cut away one part of that DNA and family tree and then say you're not valid, you're not welcome, go away. It's deeply hurtful.— Trent Lamont Miller, BOTC Campaign
Find out more
BOTC Campaign on Twitter and Online
Migrants’ Rights Network Online, Twitter and Instagram
Read more
Rieko Karatani, Britishness Reconsidered
Margaret Thatcher reluctant to give boat people refuge in Britain
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S3 E10 Migration and the making of Global Britain
S3 E9 (Not so) safe routes
S3 E8 Fortress Britain?
BtH2 E2 Beyond the headlines … Care Activism with Ethel Tungohan
S3 E7 Families at the borders
BtH2 E1 Beyond the headlines … at Manchester Museum with Senna Yousef and Caitlin Nunn
S3 E6 Migrant Rights 2.0
S3 E5 Migration, diaspora, diplomacy
S3 E4 A New Plan for Migration?
S3 E3 Bye, Bye Britain
BONUS Interview with Elspeth Guild
S3 E2 Free Movement, limited
S3 E1 Of Kings, Songs and Migrants
[SWAP] Uncommon Sense: Security, with Daria Krivonos
S2 BONUS Behind the Scenes
S2 E10 In dialogue
S2 E9 East-West inequalities and the remaking of unequal Europeans
S2 E8 Who is a migrant?
BtH1 S8 Beyond the headlines … with İdil Akıncı-Pérez
S2 E7 European Identities from the Aliens Act 1905 to Brexit
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