Welcome to a new episode of the podcast Integration or ReImmigration.
My name is Fabio Loscerbo. I am an Italian lawyer and an EU-registered lobbyist working on immigration and asylum law.
Today I would like to address a question that is increasingly central in the United Kingdom, yet often framed in overly simple terms: is the right to remain automatic, or is it something that must be legally justified?
In the UK, immigration law traditionally revolves around a clear distinction. On the one hand, there is leave to remain, granted by the executive. On the other, there are removal powers, exercised by the State. Judicial intervention is usually seen as a corrective mechanism, particularly through Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights and the principle of proportionality.
What is often missing from the debate is a broader perspective: staying in a country can be neither automatic nor purely discretionary. It can be conditional, structured, and defined by the courts.
Recent developments in Italian case law help illustrate this point. In a series of decisions delivered in late 2025, Italian judges were not asked whether individuals had complied with entry rules, but whether their removal would be legally proportionate in light of the life they had built.
The starting point is clear and familiar to British lawyers: physical presence alone does not create a right to remain. Length of stay, taken in isolation, is not decisive. What matters is whether removal would amount to a disproportionate interference with private and family life under Article 8.
Courts therefore look at concrete, verifiable elements. Employment and economic self-sufficiency. Stable accommodation. Social and family relationships. Language skills. Compliance with the law. And, crucially, the absence of any threat to public order. There are no rigid time thresholds and no automatic outcomes. Each case is assessed on its own merits.
If these elements point to genuine integration, the law limits the State’s power to remove.
If they do not, removal remains fully legitimate.
This is what can be described as a conditional right to remain.
In Italy, this judicial reasoning leads to the grant of a specific legal status, known as complementary protection. The label itself is not important for a UK audience. What matters is the function. It is not asylum, and it is not a humanitarian concession. It is the legal consequence of a proportionality assessment carried out by the courts.
Once the threshold is met, continued residence is no longer a matter of tolerance or executive grace. It becomes a rights-based outcome, grounded in judicial reasoning and legal obligation.
This approach offers an interesting perspective for the UK. It shows that immigration control does not weaken when courts play a central role. On the contrary, enforcement becomes more credible when it is selective, legally reasoned, and accountable.
The real alternative is not between strict enforcement and leniency. It is between arbitrary decisions and decisions governed by law.
This is where the paradigm Integration or ReImmigration becomes relevant. Not as a political slogan, but as a description of how legal systems already operate. Integration is not assumed. It is tested. And when it is real, it produces legal consequences. When it is not, the State retains its power to enforce removal.
What we are seeing in European courts today is not a retreat from control, but a refinement of it. A move towards a system where the right to remain is conditional, reviewable, and grounded in the rule of law.
Thank you for listening to this episode of Integration or ReImmigration.
I’m Fabio Loscerbo.
Until next time.
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