• Text Only
  • Print
  • AAA

ral: Researching Asylum in London

A-Z Topics

  • Home
  • Advanced Search
  • Add a Resource
  • Subscribe
  • About Us

Explore by Theme

  • Asylum law & policy
  • Housing & welfare support
  • Arts & media
  • Health
  • Community
  • Education & employment
  • Vulnerable groups

A-Z Topics

  • Access to employment
  • Access to healthcare
  • Arts & integration
  • Business & enterprise
  • Children & adolescents
  • Community development
  • Community relations
  • Community safety
  • Cultural attitudes to health
  • Decision-making
  • Demographics
  • Detention
  • Disabilities
  • Drugs
  • Early years
  • Elderly
  • English language & ESOL
  • Further & higher education
  • HIV & AIDS
  • Homelessness & destitution
  • Housing conditions
  • Housing needs
  • Identity
  • Integration
  • Integration policy
  • Internet
  • Interpreting
  • Legal advice
  • LGBT
  • Low paid employment
  • Media
  • Mental health - child & adolescent
  • Mental health - general
  • Mental health - trauma
  • Museums & libraries
  • Music
  • NASS
  • Political participation
  • Primary Care
  • Professionals
  • Public attitudes
  • RCOs
  • Removals
  • Return
  • Schooling
  • Sexual & reproductive health
  • Skills
  • Social care
  • Social housing
  • Social networks
  • TB
  • Torture
  • Trafficking
  • Training
  • Transnationalism
  • Unaccompanied children
  • Visual art
  • Volunteering & work experience
  • Welfare entitlements
  • Women

A Brief history of asylum in London provides context to the research included on the database. This short piece gives a basic outline of the history of refugee migration to London, focusing on settlement patterns, reception and figures.

a-z
© Juan Cubilla flickr.com

All of the statistical information relating to the asylum seeker and refugee population in the capital that is currently available can be found in the London asylum statistics paper.

  • Visit ICAR
  • Copyright © 2006 Researching Asylum in London
Powered by tincan :: webbler