Fundraising
Got a Kindle for Christmas? Wondering what to do with it now you’ve read the first couple of chapters of Great Expectations and then swiftly moved on to some Sherlock Holmes? You can now subscribe to Free Movement on your Kindle: while away your commute and keep yourself bang up to date with the latest immigration and asylum law developments! Super.
More seriously, I’ve decided to do a little fundraising for the blog, with any excess being donated to BAILII, who make the blog possible. Two Kindle ebooks have been created which include all the legal material posted on Free Movement in 2010 and 2011 respectively. These can be downloaded here:
They are priced at £5.14 each (don’t ask). If the blog’s limited costs are recouped then any excess funds raised will be donated to BAILII. BAILII recently launched a fundraising drive because a large funder pulled out, and without BAILII this and other legal blogs would be all but impossible.
If you find this blog and BAILII useful then please consider showing your support by buying one or both of the ebooks.
While I’m on the subject, the HJT Training immigration manual is also now available on Kindle.
4 Responses to Fundraising
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@freemvntblog
- Another food based integration strategy from Pickles http://t.co/IYu2xjcQ 4 hours ago
- @AdamWagner1 Was going in as they were coming out, which was interesting... 6 hours ago
- @AdamWagner1 Well done. No doubt we'll be against each other in due course now. 6 hours ago
- @migrationwatch And? 8 hours ago
- RT @migrationwatch: Nearly two thirds of births in London are to a foreign born parent http://t.co/fharBhJ2 8 hours ago
Immigration cases- SS (Sri Lanka) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWCA Civ 155 (21 February 2012) 21 February 2012
- Secretary of State for the Home Department v SP (North Korea) & Ors [2012] EWCA Civ 114 (16 February 2012) 16 February 2012
- Sanade and others (British children - Zambrano Dereci) [2011] UKUT 48 (IAC) (07 February 2012) 10 February 2012
- YF (China) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWCA Civ 77 (10 February 2012) 10 February 2012
- A v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWHC 117 (Admin) (08 February 2012) 8 February 2012
- Masih (deportation - public interest - basic principles) Pakistan [2012] UKUT 46 (IAC) (07 February 2012) 7 February 2012
- Othman v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] UKSIAC B1 (6 February 2012) 6 February 2012
- Moussaoui, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWHC 126 (Admin) (03 February 2012) 3 February 2012
UK Border Agency- Online appointment bookings in UK unavailable on 21 February 2012 21 February 2012
- Gatwick airport drugs smuggler 17 February 2012
- Biometric residence permits are being introduced for more immigration categories 14 February 2012
- Changes to Tier 1 application requirements 13 February 2012
- New student rules to welcome the brightest and best while tackling abuse 13 February 2012
Immigration news- 35 years for Nikitta Grender's killer 22 February 2012
- S Korea urges China on refugees 22 February 2012
- Somalia: UK weighs up air strikes against rebels 22 February 2012
- Letters: The UKBA and child asylum seekers 22 February 2012
- Somali community in Britain begins to find its voice 22 February 2012
Policy and research- New migrants need better quality private rented housing 22 February 2012
- Shock Horror News! Inspection shows it doesn’t really matter that not all passengers are subjected to the full rigour of identity checks at borders 21 February 2012
- A manifesto on migration and integration for the next Mayor of London 20 February 2012
- The story of MRN (so far...) 20 February 2012
- The Legal Aid Bill - last chance to act 20 February 2012
- The Free Movement blog is written by barristers in the immigration team at Renaissance Chambers
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Latest from HJT Training
- Attend our Asylum Law update course on Monday 20th Feburary and recieve our Home Office Policy set Volumes 1 and 2 http://t.co/ZNooKtjO 1 week ago
- Buy our Asylum Update course and get our Home Office Policy manual for FREE!! http://t.co/ZNooKtjO 2 weeks ago
- New announcement: The abolition of Immigration Rule 395C! find out more http://t.co/VcuPrIgJ 4 weeks ago
- Keep yourself updated on latest developments in Immigration, Asylum, Human Rights, PBS & European Law http://t.co/AxYCeG7N 1 month ago
- Understanding Legal Aid: Practical tips on Maximising Profitability http://t.co/Zsk1JcIx 1 month ago
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The information and commentary on this blog is provided free of charge for information purposes only. The information and commentary does not, and is not intended to, amount to legal advice to any person. Views expressed in blog posts are those of the author only, not Renaissance Chambers as a whole.














Sorry to be really thick and generally luddite…
Can they be downloaded outside the UK too with payment by online banking and no account setup/account keeping fees or extra fees for “transport and handling” since there would be no transport and handling.
Very important for us technical-idiots, how does one read a “kindle” document on a normal PC? Does it open like a PDF or Word document so that it can easily be navigated by page number/word search?
I notice it is necessary to download Amazon-specific software to view it, is it certified safe/spyware/adware free?
Only asking because I’m interested in the purchase due to the good cause but may not be the only one who has never used “kindle” and can only gather what wikipedia says.
Hum, all good questions. I’ll tell you what I know or understand. Amazon are very international and you can buy the FM ebooks at Amazon.com or in several other countries. A Kindle ebook can be read on any device that runs Kindle software, which includes PCs, Macs and iDevices including iPads. Kindle software is free and can be downloaded from Amazon directly, but you can as an alternative use open source ebook readers, such as Calibre.
Hope that answers your questions.
You won’t have any adware or similar issues with the Kindle for PC software, don’t be put off giving it a go.
I tried subscribing to my own blog on my Kindle eInk thing and also got a sample chapter from one of the compilations and the links do work as long as you are hooked up to wifi. However, neither the blog subscription nor the compilation ebook appear on my Kindle apps on my Apple iDevices.