Informações:
Sinopse
A podcast for the discussion of immigration law and policy. Each episode features 2-3 lawyers, academics, politicians, and stakeholders discussing current migration issues.
Episódios
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#190 - Express Entry Refusals
25/11/2025 Duração: 46minSteven and Deanna dive deep into the most common reasons IRCC refuses Express Entry applications, with a focus on what visa officers determine to be insufficient reference letters. 1:00 – Correction from last episode: OINP Skilled Trades “draw” was actually a mass cancellation. Thoughts on this and Bill C-12. 10:00 – Express Entry refusals. NOC lead statements + main duties, employers not listing job duties, duties don’t match the NOC, blended NOCs. 17:00 – Should employers include percentage breakdown of duties?26:00 – Why verbs like “assist,” “support,” “help,” or “maintain” are dangerous27:12 – Procedural fairness: when IRCC must NOT contact youLive Questions. 31:10 – Will CEC draws exceed 1,000 ITAs in 2025?32:49 – Will Bill C-12 cancel Start-Up Visa and non-priority org files?36:50 – Is IRCC looking for any reason to refuse?37:45 – Will I get refused if my reference letter only lists 40 hours per week?38:34 – Could Bill C-12 cancel existing PRs?39:26 – Could TR-PR cover SUV applicants in 2026–27?40:05 –
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#189 - The 2026–2028 Levels Plan: Behind the Numbers
17/11/2025 Duração: 55minCanada’s new 2026–2028 Immigration Levels Plan is here, and it’s a lot more confusing than media headlines suggest.This episode unpacks how the Carney government has quietly layered “one-time initiatives” on top of the official levels plan, including a massive cohort of protected persons and in-Canada temporary residents transitioning to permanent residence, and why the oft-repeated topline of 380,000 PRs is misleading once you add those extra streams.Topics discussed also include shrinking the temporary resident share of the population, the quiet rollback of francophone immigration targets, cuts to IRCC’s budget, and the rule-of-law issues when the same legal criteria suddenly produce totally different outcomes and higher refusal rates.We also answer live listener questions on CEC, work experience across multiple NOCs, why there aren't many ITAs, the H-1B pathway, and more. 5:05 – The “math’s not mathing”: topline 380,000 vs extra 140,000 PRs19:00 – Temporary resident caps, extensions, and the missing data2
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#188 - Retired CSIS Analyst Phil Gurski on Immigration Security Screening
10/11/2025 Duração: 01h11minPhil Gurski is the President and CEO of Borealis Threat and Risk Consulting Ltd. He previous worked as a senior strategic analyst at the Canadian Security Intelligence Service.We discuss CSIS's role in Canadian immigration screening, the increase in comprehensive background checks, how CSIS and CBSA divide up security work, the Bishnoi gang, Bill C-12, delays in applications from China, mandamus and whether Canada lacks a national security culture. 05:26 – How CSIS does immigration security screening and the dramatic increase in comprehensive background checks10:08 – Why every citizenship application goes to CSIS for security screening15:03 – Canada’s choices: lax screening, less immigration, more surveillance… or something else?21:16 – Delays, disenfranchisement & back-end vs front-end screening31:26 – CSIS vs CBSA vs IRCC: who does what in screening?37:00 – Security vs human rights42:01 – International students, volume and how the system can be exploited49:04 – Timelines, CSIS capacity, and mandamus in
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#187 - IRCC is Watching
03/11/2025 Duração: 47minDeanna, Sadaf Kashfi and Caroline Senini discuss your rights and obligations at the border, the intersection of immigration and criminal law, unreasonable search and seizure, mandatory minimum sentences and the Supreme Court of Canada decision in Quebec (Attorney General) v. Senneville, and more. Sadaf Kashfi is the founder of DMF Law, a Vancouver immigration & criminal-defence litigation boutique. Caroline Senini is a Partner at Peck and Company, where she practices in constitutional and regulatory matters, at both trial and appeal. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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#186 - Retired IRCC Program Manager, Greg Chubak
27/10/2025 Duração: 01h03minGreg Chubak retired from IRCC in 2022. He was posted to South Korea, Hong Kong and Singapore and the program manager in Hungary, Malaysia, Seattle, Sri Lanka and Austria. We discuss what programs have worked and haven't over the years, applications for authorization to return to Canada, rehabilitation applications, difficult cases, what concerns Greg about the direction of immigration law. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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#185 - Lorne Waldman: Landmark Cases to Today's Immigration Crisis
20/10/2025 Duração: 01h08minLorne Waldman, one of Canada’s most recognized immigration litigators, joins to discuss some of his most landmark cases, today’s processing and refugee backlogs, mandamus and where economic immigration policy is headed. Co-hosts Steven Meurrens and Deanna Okun-Nachoff also field listener questions on enhanced security screening, immigration consequences of sentencing, Express Entry trends, and practical career advice for junior counsel.Timestamps3:12 – Maher Arar inquiry5:41 – Niqab/citizenship-oath litigation 6:46 – Backlog cancellation class action8:33 – Security certificates12:13 – Pushpanathan15:32 – Refugee health care17:46 – The Bill of Rights and citizenship revocation20:57 – Public opinion shift on immigration26:49 – RPD/Federal Court backlogs and triage failures37:07 – Federal Court inefficiencies40:12 – Q&A: Security screening delays49:51 – Bill C-220: should judges consider immigration consequences at sentencing?1:00:04 – Express Entry1:05:57 – Career advice for junior immigration lawyers Hoste
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#184 - Retired CBSA Chief of Enforcement & Intelligence Operations, Christian Lane
14/10/2025 Duração: 01h21sChristian Lane is a retired Canada Border Services Agency officer whose career included serving as a Border Services Officer, Inland Enforcement Officer, Manager of Immigration Detention Operations and Chief of Enforcement & Intelligence Operations.Topics discussed include Christian's various roles, the moral stress of immigration enforcement, whether individual officers and the agency want discretion when it comes to removals, immigration background checks and security screening, the role of CSIS vs. CBSA, and why public-safety agencies struggle to advocate for themselves.
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#183 - Failing Afghanistan's Heroes
07/10/2025 Duração: 01h32sCory Moore is a retired Canadian Forces military lawyer who served in Afghanistan. There, he helped develop the training of female Afghan lawyers who would go on to prosecute members of the Taliban. These brave women assisted in building the country’s justice system and enforcing the rule of law, often at great personal risk. After the fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban in 2021, Cory has continuously worked to bring those who can still be contacted to Canada under the Afghan special measures program, a program which the Federal Court recently described as suffering from "gross governmental negligence". Cory in this episode shares his profound sense of Canada's betrayal of allies who placed their trust in our country, calling attention to systemic inaction and the urgent need for accountability and reform in how Canada fulfills its moral and legal obligations to those who aided its missions abroad. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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#182 - Here to Stay
30/09/2025 Duração: 54minWe speak with Daniel Bernhard of the Institute for Canadian Citizenship about understanding immigrant retention in Canada. The Paper comes at a time when immigration to Canada is declining, outflows are increasing and the aging of Canada's population accelerates. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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#181 - Fifty Year Processing Time
22/09/2025 Duração: 51minSteven and Deanna analyze the IRCC Minister’s Transition Binder (May 2025) and its implications for processing times, including extraordinary ranges for several programs. The discussion addresses potential use of Bill C-2 authorities to suspend or terminate processing, operational realities in caregiver and Start-Up Visa files, and current dynamics in Francophone pathways. A concluding Q&A covers Express Entry eligibility, quotas, and Francophone mobility.Chapter Guide5:37 — H&C processing time range (12–600 months)8:12 — Start-Up Visa (420 months) 11:06 — CEC/PNP targets and provincial quota adjustments13:04 — Bill C-2 (Stronger Border Act): scope of cancellation/suspension powers31:03 — Live Q&ABorderlines is a Canadian immigration law podcast hosted by Steven Meurrens and Deanna Okun-Nachoff, providing in-depth analysis of immigration law, policy, and case law trends.This episode contains general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for m
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#180 - Collapsing Numbers
16/09/2025 Duração: 50minSteven and Deanna break down the collapse in internaitonal student arrivals in 2025 and plumetting approval rates across nearly all programs. .2:14 2025 stats: what the data says4:01 Cap vs. collapse in student entries7:12 Worker levels and category context21:37 Approval-rate declines and rule-of-law concerns33:47 Category approval snapshots (CEC/FSW/Francophone/H&C)38:45 Live Q&A Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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#180 - Abolish the Foreign Worker Program?
08/09/2025 Duração: 54minSteve and Deanna break down the latest political heat on the Temporary Foreign Worker Program. What is the TFWP? Will Direct Apply meaningfully fix it? Timestamps1:40 Today’s focus: abolish/reform the TFWP? 7:42 TFWP vs IMP—what’s where 10:26 LMIA fundamentals: wage, recruitment, Job Bank18:02 Direct Apply: what changes34:32 Q&A starts Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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#178 - Constitutional Protections in the Canadian Immigration field
27/08/2025 Duração: 01h01minOn this episode of the Borderlines podcast, Deanna Okun-Nachoff and guest co-host Zeynab Ziaie Moayyed speak with constitutional law guru Sujit Choudhry. We discuss Choudhry's work on the landmark Bjorkquist case, in which the Ontario Superior Court held that the Canadian Citizenship Act's "second-generation cut-off rule" was unconstitutional. Choudhry also describes his involvement in subsequent proceedings in which Canada has repeatedly failed to comply with court-ordered mandates to correct the non-compliance. We also delve into test case litigation at the crossroads of immigration and constitutional law. Choudhry describes factors he considers in selecting test cases, techniques for managing participants in a class action, choosing a venue (i.e. why proceed at federal vs. provincial court - ?), and factors that make issues at the nexus of immigration and constitutional law such a hotspot for strategic litigation. Finally, we discuss Bill C-2 (currently before the House), which proposes fundamental changes
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#177 - Agents, Fees, and Broken Promises
19/08/2025 Duração: 44minA discussion about Mac’s Convenience Stores Inc. v. Basyal, 2025 BCCA 284. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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#176 - Canadian Immigration in 2027
12/08/2025 Duração: 54minSteven and Deanna dig into two new Government of Canada consultations on immigration policy. The first is on immigration levels planning for 2027 and beyond. The second is on new Express Entry categories. Topics include the survey questions, the results of last year’s consultations, caps on workers, and the proposed new categories of senior managers, scientists & researchers and allied soldiers. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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#175 - August Crimmigration Updates
05/08/2025 Duração: 01h01minWe cover recent developments at the intersection of criminal and immigration law. We review significant Supreme Court of Canada decisions, highlight problematic CBSA investigations, discuss judicial errors during sentencing, and explore current trends in immigration policy and processing.We also answer live audience questions about express entry scores, humanitarian and compassionate applications, parent and grandparent sponsorship backlogs, and more.Timestamps:0:17 – Introduction and overview of crim-immigration updates1:36 – Supreme Court decision on Canada’s sex work laws (R. v. Kloubakov, 2025 SCC 25)13:02 – U.S. convictions and IRPA section 36(2) “committing an offence” provisions16:03 – California automatic relief and foreign spent convictions19:08 – Supreme Court decision on youth sentencing (R. v. I.M., 2025 SCC 23) and inadmissibility20:56 – Why youth convictions abroad still trigger inadmissibility: Flores Giron v. Canada21:15 – CBSA officer self-investigation leads to stayed charges23:33 – Judicial
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#174 - Bill C-2, Carney's Big Beautiful Border Bill
29/07/2025 Duração: 01h01minWe conduct a comprehensive analysis of the immigration implications of Bill C-2, an omnibus bill tabled by the federal government that significantly expands government authority and introduces sweeping changes across multiple areas of Canadian law.Bill C-2's immigration provisions would:Grant the federal government broad powers to suspend, cancel, or vary immigration documents, including permanent resident visas, permanent resident cards, temporary resident visas, work permits, study permits, and electronic travel authorizations, based on vague “public interest” criteria.Permit the bulk suspension or cancellation of immigration and refugee applications without individual case review, raising serious concerns regarding Charter rights and judicial oversight.Introduce major restrictions on refugee protection claims, including a one-year filing bar for those who do not make a claim within 12 months of arrival and expanded ineligibility for individuals who cross the Canada–U.S. border irregularly.Timestamps:0:00 –
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#73 - Bill C-3 - Expanding Canadian Citizenship by Descent
22/07/2025 Duração: 51minThe complexities of Canadian citizenship by descent with immigration lawyers Amandeep Hayer and Lisa Middlemiss.[1:35] What citizenship by descent means. [3:17] Historical and current limitations, including the first-generation rule and exceptions. [5:55] The 2023 Bjorkquist decision. [9:49] Bill C-3. [13:57] Interim measures. [20:26] Debates over residency rules and comparisons to U.S. laws. [31:00] Voting rights for citizens abroad and potential fraud risks. [44:02] How to prove citizenship without birth certificates. [45:43] Citizenship for displaced Native Americans, and Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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[Repost] #43 - An Interview with John McCallum, Canada's Immigration Minister from 2015-2017
11/07/2025 Duração: 01h06minThis episode is a repost of our interview with John McCallum, Canada's Minister of Citizenship and Immigration from November 2015 to January 2017. He passed away on June 15, 2025. A Member of Parliament from 2000 - 2017, he also served as Defence Minister under Jean Chrétien, and Veterans Affairs Minister, National Revenue Minister, Natural Resources Minister and as Chair of the Expenditure Review Committee under Paul Martin. As Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship in Justin Trudeau’s cabinet, Mr. McCallum led Canada's effort to welcome 25,000 Syrian refugees over a period of three months. He also increased the age of dependency from 18-22, repealed conditional permanent residency and reduced family class processing times. 5:00 – The resettlement of 40,000 refugees in Canada. 22:00 – The division of immigration repsonsibilities between IRCC, CBSA and ESDC. Should they be combined? 28:00 – What goes into reducing processing times. 33:00 – Abolishing conditional permanent residence. 39:00 – Mr. McC
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#172 - Fast vs. Slow: Immigration's Impact on Canada's Economy & Regions, with Daniel Hiebert
07/07/2025 Duração: 01h01minIn this episode, we dive into Dan Hiebert's latest C.D. Howe Institute report on how different immigration rates shape Canada's economic challenges and regional disparities. Key topics include:Aging Population and Immigration: Why Canada’s current immigration levels are insufficient to offset an aging population, and the implications of a simultaneously older and larger population.Regional Disparities: How immigration disproportionately fuels growth in major cities like Toronto and Vancouver, exacerbating regional population and economic gaps.Ethical and Practical Questions: Is it ethical to direct immigrants to settle in rural areas with limited services and opportunities? Should newcomers be expected to revitalize communities that Canadians are leaving?Policy Trade-offs: The tension between regionalization efforts, productivity goals, and francophone immigration targets. Dr. Hiebert also touches on innovative approaches, such as Sweden’s model of using social housing to encourage regional settlement, and pr