seventeen - Targets of restriction: asylum (and security)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2022
Summary
This chapter covers the precise targets, which are mostly associated with asylum, and, to some extent, the theme of security. Such measures are generally restrictive. As discussed in the previous chapter, while the overall Public Sector Agreement (PSA) aims on migration are quite broad, in both Spending Reviews (2002 and 2004), when examining the PSA targets attached to these aims, there is a palpable sense of ‘narrowing’. It should also be emphasised that the Home Office has chosen (or at least negotiated) such a set of PSA targets.
The Asylum PSA targets
PSA Target 7 (SR2002; linked to Home Office Aim 6) is to:
focus the asylum system on those genuinely fleeing persecution by taking speedy, high quality decisions and reducing significantly unfounded asylum claims, including by: fast turn-around of manifestly unfounded cases; ensuring by 2004 that 75 per cent of substantive asylum applications are decided within two months; and that a proportion (to be determined) including final appeal, to be decided within six months; enforce the immigration laws more effectively by removing a greater proportion of failed asylum-seekers. (Home Office, 2005e, p 116)
PSA Target 5 (SR2004; linked to Home Office Aim 4) is to:
reduce unfounded asylum claims as part of a broader strategy to tackle abuse of the immigration laws and promote controlled legal migration.
The measurement is focused on ‘unfounded’ asylum claims, which includes both failed asylum claims and cases where persons are not granted refugee status but granted temporary leave. The baseline period is the year 2002/03 and the target will have been achieved if the number of unfounded asylum claims in the year 2007/08 is less than in the baseline year.
These two targets are very clearly focused on asylum and are the only performance measures linked to the broader ‘migration’ PSA Aim.
Other restrictive targets
In addition to the targets on asylum set out above, the only other precise measurable targets refer to unauthorised migrants. Labour has set two quantitative targets, both for deportations. The first deportation target was to remove 30,000 failed asylum seekers per year in 2001/02. The second, known as the ‘tipping point’ target, was introduced in an article in The Times penned by the Prime Minister, in which he presented a target of deporting more failed applicants per month than those who made unfounded applications by December 2005.
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- Immigration under New Labour , pp. 161 - 170Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2007