Your sister is living in italy. what type of software would you need to keep in touch with her?

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2. Your sister is living in Italy. What type of Software would you need to keep in touch with her? a. Reference b. Multimedia c. Spreadsheet d Communication​

Answer:

D. i think

Explanation:

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Table of Contents

  • Get Visa Refusal Tips Here
  • Stage 1 – The Pain – Is a visa refusal around that next corner?
  • “Natural Justice” letters are dangerous
  • Your response to “Invitation to Comment”
  • Will they contact you before refusing your visa?
  • Does everyone get scrutinised equally?
  • Student visa interviews
  • Stage 2 – The Anguish – Notification of refusal of visa application
  • Refusal decisions are final
  • Lodging another application
  • Can you apply again?
  • Bridging visa holder getting visa refusal
  • Student visa refusals
  • Reasons your student visa application will be rejected
  • Are you a “genuine temporary entrant”?
  • Australian visitor visa refusals
  • Common reasons for visas being denied
  • Visa refusal after overstaying your visa
  • Inconsistent answers, incorrect answers
  • Can lodging a bond fix my visitor visa refusal problem?
  • Health and character
  • Chance of visitor visa refusal after offshore partner visa is lodged?
  • Will you get a refund of your visa application fee if your visa is refused?
  • Stage 3 – The Confusion – Appealing to the AAT, re-lodge another visa or go home?
  • Two chances
  • How the AAT works
  • Cost of appealing after a visa refusal
  • Are you too late to apply for review to the AAT?
  • Stage 4 – Double Trouble – What if you lose at the AAT?
  • What if you are not successful in appealing a visa refusal at the AAT?
  • Legal error in decision making
  • Asking the Minister to intervene
  • Can migration agents assist with visa refusals appeals at the Federal Circuit Court?
  • Why use specialised visa refusal lawyers?
  • Best practice in FCC litigation
  • Do you know these things about visa refusal and visa appeal problems?
  • Visa refusal appeal action plan
  • Invalid applications
  • Surprise visa refusals
  • Different to visa cancellation
  • Your experience?

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How can the siblings or aunt/uncle of an Italian citizen obtain residence in Italy?

It is widely known that family members of an Italian (or EU) citizen, have a right of residence in Italy. The spouse, the parents, the minor children, and even the parents and children of an Italian citizen’s spouse can obtain a 5 years residence card.

However, it is less known that other family members like siblings, adult children, aunts and uncles, irrespective of their nationality, can be granted a residence permit and settle down in Italy.

The key is that law forbids to remove from Italy a family member within the second degree who lives with an Italian citizen (article 19 section 2C of the Italian Aliens Act, Decreto legislativo of July 25th, 1998 no. 286).

That is because the family is a very important unit of human society and enjoys ultimate protection by the Constitution of the Italian Republic.

Parents. grandparents, siblings, adult children, aunts, and uncles are all included among the protected family members who cannot be returned to their country of origin or any other.

These family members are eligible for a residence permit in Italy according to Article 28 of Implementing Regulation of 31 August 1999 no. 394.

NOTE: This regulation applies only to the non-EU family members of Italian citizen. It does not apply to the non-EU family members of persons holding the citizenship of other EU member states.

Advantages

A permit for family reasons is called “Permesso di soggiorno per motivi familiari”:

  • it gives access to full health care coverage on a par with Italian citizens, work, study, and perform any other legal activity in Italy
  • it has a 2-year duration
  • it can be renewed an unlimited number of times
  • in case the application is rejected, the family member can obtain justice through a less long and expensive process at the local Tribunal instead of the regular application process at the Administrative Court.

Disadvantages

It is a dependent residence permit. It depends on the Italian citizen. In principle, a family member may lose the residence permit in case the Italian citizen in the family changes address moves to another country, or dies.

Cohabitation with the Italian citizen is required. So if the Italian citizen moves to another address or wants the family member out of the residence, the family member may lose the residence permit. In practice, the Italian authorities will reject the request to renew the residence permit.

A family member with such a dependent residence permit may not qualify for a permanent residence permit. That is a residence permit that can be granted after a 5-year stay in Italy to non-Italian citizens who can provide for themselves (called “Permesso dell’Unione Europea per soggiornanti di lungo periodo“). It enables to access the work market and services of any other EU member state and settle down there.

This residence permit is valid only in Italy. It does not give access to residence in other European states.

How to obtain an independent residence permit

Even in case of loss of a family residence permit (or rejection of its renewal), there are possibilities to obtain another residence permit.

A brother or an adult child, for example, may end the cohabitation with the Italian citizen.

In these situations, the law provides that the family member may obtain an independent residence permit if she proves that she has a job, a business or a scholarship (Article 30 section 5 of the Italian Aliens Act, Decreto legislativo of 25 July 1998 no. 286).

The application is to be submitted directly to the Immigration police office of the Italian citizen’s area of residence (not by the mail, no regular kits for residence permits application).

Which family members are entitled to this residence permit?

These are family members within the second degree, according to Italian law:

> Siblings> parents> grandparents> children (any age)

> grandchildren (any age)

Home » Immigration Guides » Visa Refusal Appeals: A Guide To Avoiding And Appealing Australian Visa Refusal Decisions [Update July 2022]

Get Visa Refusal Tips Here

Stage 1 – The Pain – Is a visa refusal around that next corner?

Have you received a letter from Immigration inviting you to comment on Adverse Information? What does this mean? Well, the Department feels there might be a very good reason why your visa application could be refused. You have a very limited opportunity to convince them otherwise. 

“Natural Justice” letters are dangerous

It is important that you take any letter very seriously. Carefully read any “Invitation to Comment” letter that is sent through to you. 

There is a strict time deadline, which appears in these letters. You must make a response to the issue raised by the Department on time. Take care to calculate when the time period starts, and when it ends.

Next, be very careful to make sure that any information you provide in response to an adverse information letter will not further prejudice your application. Don’t dig yourself into an even bigger hole. The issue identified by the Department could potentially become an even greater issue for you. Are you giving Immigration more rope with which to hang you?

Your response to “Invitation to Comment”

Be sure to understand and comprehend fully what it is that the delegate is concerned about. If the delegate is asking for further documents or information, you must be clear on precisely what it is that the delegate is ultimately trying to ascertain.

This is a useful exercise to undertake with the assistance of somebody who understands the visa refusal process. This is because you might not be fully aware of the implications of the letter you have received from the Department … until, of course, you receive a refusal.

Will they contact you before refusing your visa?

If you are making an application for a visa from overseas (that is, if you are outside of Australia when making your Australian visa application) and you do not have a sponsor in relation to the application you lodge, then the Department is likely to make a decision on your application without taking the additional step of contacting you for clarification on the information that you have provided.

The Department might contact you, but you should be aware that there is no legal requirement for them to do so.

If you are offshore and you’re applying for a sponsored visa, then Immigration may seek to interview you prior to granting you a visa.

Does everyone get scrutinised equally?

No! This is particularly so if you are from a country where applications are known to have a high incidence of fraud. You can also expect more intense questions and verification if your own immigration history is imperfect.

My experience is that these applications, which do not have any appeal rights, are decided quite quickly and without much effort or interest by the Department to contact visa applicants to request further information prior to refusal.

The most significant lesson from all of this is to make sure that you always provide complete information to the Department in support of your application for a visa. This should be as soon as your application is made, or as soon as possible after the submission of your application.

Student visa interviews

You should expect to be interviewed in relation to your plans to visit Australia to study. It is expected that you should be aware of the course you applied for, how it is structured, and what you will and won’t be studying in that course. You will frustrate your chances forever if you make an application for a student visa for Australia without knowing enough about the course you intend to study.

Another aspect of student visa refusal is that it must make sense for you to study the course, given your previous study history. Suppose there is a great divergence between your study history abroad and the study you wish to undertake in Australia. In that case, you will need to provide some logical and plausible explanation as to why your study direction has changed.

You should also be able to clearly articulate how your course of study in Australia will help you achieve your future plans.

Stage 2 – The Anguish – Notification of refusal of visa application

Refusal decisions are final

When an application for a visa has been considered against the criteria for the grant of the visa applied for and it has been decided to refuse your visa application, it is really quite pointless to go back to your case officer and argue for a reversal of the refusal decision.

Lodging another application

When you’re overseas (outside of Australia), it is usually the case that you can lodge as many visa applications as you are prepared to pay charges for.

For this reason, it’s often the case that if you are offshore and you receive a visa refusal, then it may well be that the simplest, fastest and most cost effective way to proceed is to lodge a fresh application for a visa.

This fresh application would, ideally, have better submissions and more complete information, which might persuade the case officer that your case has sufficient merit for a visa grant.

If it is the case that you are in Australia at the time of lodging your visa application, then you will usually have been granted a bridging visa. This visa expires 35 days after any visa refusal decision has been made in respect of your application.

Applications lodged onshore will usually have an appeal right if the application is refused, but usually not so if the application is made offshore and there is no sponsor. Check this!

Can you apply again?

The answer to this question depends on your immigration status in Australia.

Assuming you are in Australia at the time of your visa refusal, then the important question is whether you hold a substantive visa.

A substantive visa is best thought of as any visa for Australia other than a bridging visa.

If you hold a substantive visa, then it is more likely that you will be able to lodge another visa application while in Australia, and that you will be granted a bridging visa in association with that new visa application.

For example, suppose you are the holder of a student visa that expires in two and a half years’ time and you had previously made an application for a partner visa which was refused today. In that case, you might be able to make a further application for another visa while you are in Australia.

Bridging visa holder getting visa refusal

The situation is very different, however, if you hold a bridging visa at the time of receiving the visa refusal decision.

This is because holders of bridging visas have far more limited opportunities to make valid applications for further visas in Australia, to remain in Australia.

For more of my tips on bridging visas, check out my guide to bridging visas.

Student visa refusals

If you are overseas and you’re making your first application for a student visa for Australia and it is refused, you will typically not have any rights to appeal your visa refusal.

However, if you are in Australia and you have previously been granted a student visa for Australia, and you’re seeking to make a further application for a student visa while you are in Australia, then you will typically have an opportunity to seek a review of any decision that is made to refuse you a further student visa.

Reasons your student visa application will be rejected

In my experience, most student visas are refused for one of two reasons.

The first is that the student is unable to show satisfactory evidence that they have the financial resources to fund their study and stay in Australia, because they fail to understand what sort of evidence is required, or they fail to comprehend the relevant times when funds are required to be shown to be available.

The second reason for refusal is that a student visa applicant fails to meet a criterion known as the “genuine temporary entrant” requirement, or “GTE” requirement.

Are you a “genuine temporary entrant”?

In this scenario, the delegate deciding the application for a student visa will usually refuse a student visa application based on the GTE requirement if the decision-maker concludes that the applicant is a non-genuine temporary entrant and is simply using the student visa program to extend their stay in Australia for purposes other than genuine study.

The delegate is typically concerned that the student is unlikely to return to their home country after their course of study because the situation is either so good in Australia or so bad in the student’s home country.

Australian visitor visa refusals

Visitor visas for Australia fall into two main groups. One group is for visitors who have no sponsors in Australia. The other is for visitors who have family in Australia who have indicated a willingness to sponsor a visa applicant.

A family-sponsored visitor visa is one that is made when the visa applicant is abroad, but in which the Australian decision-maker is usually based in Australia.

If a decision is made to refuse a family-sponsored visa, the visa applicant will have a right to seek a review before the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT).

Common reasons for visas being denied

You will already be aware that Australia is very particular about which visa applications it approves. The most common reason your visa will be refused is if the decision-maker feels that there are no prospects of the visa applicant complying with the visa grant, which would allow the visitor to visit Australia temporarily and return to their country. Because Australia is such a desirable location you can expect people to want to live here, and visitors to Australia will have their visa applications carefully scrutinised.

Are you from a third-world country? If so, you’ll need to convince a decision-maker that you will comply with any visa grant conditions. In particular, you’ll need to convince the decision-maker that you will exit and be a genuine temporary entrant visiting Australia for the purposes of the visa granted to you.

Visa refusal after overstaying your visa

Of course, if you have come to Australia and failed to comply with the conditions of your visa, or overstayed your visa, then it will be extremely difficult for you to persuade the decision-maker that you should be eligible for the grant of a further visitor visa.

Inconsistent answers, incorrect answers

Inconsistency, not just between documents provided in your visitor visa application, but also inconsistent information provided in one visitor visa application compared with the information provided in another visa application, can provide the basis for refusal of your visitor visa.

Too often, I see applications for visitor visas taken so casually that almost no supporting materials are provided. Immigration officers don’t like to spend too much time and effort seeking further information from visa applicants abroad, and usually, any visitor visa application which is in any way unconvincing will be refused. Accordingly, care should be taken to provide complete but relevant information in association with any visitor visa application.

Another common reason why your visitor visa is likely to be refused is that your supporting documents are not consistent with one another and are not readily verifiable in the event that a decision-maker contacts your employer (or past employer) in your home country.

Can lodging a bond fix my visitor visa refusal problem?

I often get asked why a bond was not asked for by the Department, and what is the problem if a bond is pledged to secure the obligations of the visa holder in respect of any visa granted.

This is perhaps the biggest myth floating around in the minds of visa applicants. Thinking that a bond will cure any defects that visa applications have is wrong.

While it is true that one may be imposed by decision-makers, bonds are beside the point. Bonds may only be additionally relevant and then imposed, if the primary consideration (of whether or not the visitor is in fact a genuine visitor) is met and compliance with the visa conditions and visa terms is extremely likely.

Health and character

Of course, every visa application for Australia needs to meet health requirements and character requirements. If you are unhealthy or have a criminal record, your visitor visa is likely to be refused. You should take care not to provide misleading information in relation to any information you provide in support of your application.

If the decision-maker becomes aware that false or misleading information has been provided, you will suffer sanctions. These sanctions can include not being able to be granted a visa for a period of 3 years (in the case of false and misleading information, or bogus documents) or for a period of 10 years (in the case of false or misleading information, or bogus documents in relation to your true identity).

Take care when making an application for what seems to be the quickest visa. One quick way of getting a visitor visa refusal is to make an application for a visa for Australia to see your Australian partner or de facto partner. However, the correct visa in the case where you wish to visit Australia to stay with your Australian partner, or permanent resident partner, is a “Partner visa” for Australia.

One strategy is getting a visa to travel to Australia and lodging a partner visa after arriving in Australia. This might be easy for some applicants who hold certain passports, and who do not attract a “no further stay” condition, but it is prudent to consider making an application for the offshore partner visa first, before applying for a visitor visa.

Chance of visitor visa refusal after offshore partner visa is lodged?

Given the considerable delay in decision-makers making decisions in relation to partner visa applications, a sponsored family visitor visa or a visitor visa application after an offshore partner visa application has been lodged might prove fruitful.

This strategy might be practical and useful for visitors from certain countries seeking to join their partner, but of no use if the visa applicant is from a country that is subject to more scrutiny in relation to visa applications. eg. a country whose citizens are noted for abuse of the partner visa program. In this case, it is unlikely that a visitor visa will be granted while waiting for a partner visa to be decided.

Will you get a refund of your visa application fee if your visa is refused?

Are you kidding! You are seriously unlikely to get any refund of fees. The Department will not usually refund any visa application fees and charges that you have paid if your visa is refused or withdrawn. 

In the case of visa applications where the visa application charge is paid in multiple instalments, then the second instalment will usually not be payable if your visa application is refused or withdrawn before the second instalment is actually paid.

Stage 3 – The Confusion – Appealing to the AAT, re-lodge another visa or go home?

Most applications made with the Department of Immigration when you’re in Australia, or for which there is an Australian permanent resident sponsor, will allow for an appeal to be made to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT). In this way, most applicants have two opportunities to provide information to the decision-maker and to make out their case.

The first opportunity is at the departmental level (to the delegate of the Department of Immigration), and the second opportunity is to the member at the AAT. This is where it stops.

Two chances

You have two opportunities (and only two opportunities) to make your case. However, there is an opportunity to obtain a remedy in case you feel that there is some reason that the Tribunal has made a decision that it is not authorised to make.

An incorrect decision is often referred to as a decision that is infected with legal error, and an error on the part of the Tribunal. The decision can then usually be challenged by way of application to the Federal Circuit Court (FCC). The FCC reviews decisions of the Tribunal with a view to confirming legal errors. If a legal error is confirmed, then the FCC will quash the decision of the Tribunal so that your case is remitted back to the Tribunal for reconsideration and a new decision by a differently constituted Tribunal.

How the AAT works

The AAT is not able to make any decision to grant a visa. It will make a decision as to whether or not the criteria for the granting of a visa are satisfied or not. If the Tribunal feels that the decision of the delegate at the Department of Immigration was a correct decision, then it will confirm the decision of the delegate.

If the Tribunal, on the other hand, is of the view that you meet the criteria for the grant of the visa, it will make a finding to that effect and remit the decision with a direction to the Department of Immigration to further consider the application in view of the Tribunal’s findings. It is important to note that the Tribunal is not empowered to grant any visa.

Cost of appealing after a visa refusal

Assuming you do have a right of appeal to the AAT after your visa has been refused, you will need to pay a fee to the AAT at the time of filing your application for review. A tribunal will then reconsider your circumstances against the same laws that were applicable to your application when considered by the delegate at the Department of Immigration.

The AAT charges a fee when an application is filed and that fee at the time of writing was $3,000. If you are successful in your application for review, then 50% of this fee is refunded to you. Of course, if you have a representative assisting you in managing your appeal and appearing at the Tribunal to make oral submissions, in addition to making written submissions both before and after the hearing, professional fees will be payable to that representative.

The fees payable to representatives who must be registered Australian Migration Agents (and who might also be Australian Legal Practitioners) will vary depending on their skills and knowledge and the level of assistance provided by the representative to you.

It is important to select a representative who adds value to your application and who is persuasive.

This happens only if your representative has credibility with the Tribunal and is competent and diligent in providing the Tribunal with all the relevant information, in a way that puts your best foot forward and assists the Tribunal in ensuring it has before it complete and correct information, so that the Tribunal may then make the correct decision.

Are you too late to apply for review to the AAT?

It may well be too late after a refusal decision (and after you’ve made your own responses or provided additional information) to then fully and properly present your case for success if the matter was to be reviewed on appeal before a Member of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT).

If you are in Australia at the time of the visa decision, and you have made a valid application for the visa earlier while in Australia, then you will usually have a right of appeal to the AAT.

The appeal would be a review of the decision of the delegate of the Minister to refuse your visa. This right of appeal typically lasts 21 days from the date of the decision.  Note: the appeal period is much shorter in the case of a visa “cancellation”.

Stage 4 – Double Trouble – What if you lose at the AAT?

What if you are not successful in appealing a visa refusal at the AAT?

Usually, you’ll have two options if you fail at the AAT.  

One option is to accept the umpire’s decision and to exit Australia unless you have some other opportunity for a visa pending.  

Another option is to make a special submission to the Minister for personal intervention in relation to your circumstances if they are particularly unique. 

A third possibility is one in which I specialise. This involves scrutinising the decision of the member(s) of the Tribunal and identifying a legal error. Can it be argued that the decision of the AAT is one that should not stand? If yes, a Federal Circuit Court judge might deem it appropriate to order the decision of the AAT be quashed.  

Whether or not the Tribunal’s decision is infected with legal error is a complex issue. It is not possible, usually, to identify error by simply reading the decision of the delegate.

Rather, one needs to have a forensic review of all of the information provided in respect of the application for a visa, together with all of the laws and regulations which are relevant to the consideration of the visa grant, and a review of the chronology of events in the exchange of information between the applicant, the Department and the Tribunal, as well as with any other government agencies.

This may include the transcript of the hearing before the Tribunal. Once all this material is to hand, you might then just have enough information from which to discern whether or not the decision ultimately made by the Tribunal was one which was infected with legal error.

Asking the Minister to intervene

If your case is particularly unique, and typically where a visa refusal is an unintended consequence of Australian immigration rules, you may have a basis of seeking special intervention by the Minister for Immigration in your particular case.

This can be done after you have made an application for review to the AAT of the decision to refuse your visa. It is critical that you do not miss your opportunity to make an application for review to the AAT, as if you fail to make your application to the AAT, you might be denied the opportunity of making an application for ministerial intervention (which is only possible after your application has first been considered by the AAT).

Can migration agents assist with visa refusals appeals at the Federal Circuit Court?

The short answer is that some Migration Agents are extremely skilled in assisting clients with visa refusal advice, and assisting with the making of new applications successfully (or making applications for review) to the AAT.

Other Migration Agents, however, might not have the skillset and the communication skills required to effectively push your case over the line after it has been refused. Make sure you understand that once an application has been refused there is a considerable additional hurdle that you must overcome in relation to getting the next application approved (simply due to the prior refusal).

Why use specialised visa refusal lawyers?

Certainly, when it comes to discerning whether the decision of a Tribunal is infected with legal error, I’m of the view that it is not usually prudent for a Migration Agent to advise in relation to jurisdictional error.

This is because it requires considerable knowledge of legal principles, and registered Migration Agents either do not have this skill set or knowledge base. Also, there are additional rules and qualifications needed for registered and practising Australian legal practitioners.

Some Migration Agents work around this issue by using and associating with lawyers, or by committing clients into a direct brief situation, where they are ghosting themselves and a relationship is effective between the visa applicant and a barrister. This is known as a direct brief scenario.

Migration Agents should not be briefing barristers directly. Rather, barristers should be taking briefs, within the meaning of the Uniform Solicitor’s Rules and the Uniform Barrister’s Rules, either directly from clients in a direct brief situation, or from Australian legal practitioners.

If you have a visa refusal, you should take steps to obtain advice from an Australian Legal Practitioner skilled in the area of Australian immigration law.

The first question you should ask is whether or not your prospective representative is an Australian legal practitioner, and what level of success they have had in running cases before the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT), and in the Federal Circuit Court (FCC), and the Federal Court in respect of challenges to immigration decision-making.

Best practice in FCC litigation

The better option is to get two or three separate opinions in relation to prospects for success in either making a fresh application (if that is possible) or making an appeal to the AAT.

Our practice is a leader in the field of assisting with visa refusals, having successfully pursued hundreds and hundreds of cases at the Tribunal, and succeeding in a significant number of important cases in the FCC in respect of immigration administrative decision-making.

You can access our 20 years of experience in successful appeals against visa refusal by making an appointment to see us today.

Do you know these things about visa refusal and visa appeal problems?

Visa refusal appeal action plan

Here are the first three things you should do immediately after your Australian visa has been refused:

  1. Identify the notification document (email or letter)
  2. Identify the decision record (usually attached to the notification document)
  3. Identify all of the documents that were provided to the Department of Immigration

These are the most important three things that any immigration lawyer will need. With this information, you have enough to have a meaningful conversation with an expert. Without it, you are wasting each other’s time. 

Invalid applications

This is perhaps the worst type of rejection, because you may now be unlawful. Invalid applications mean that any bridging visa you thought you held (as a result of having made a valid application) does not exist.

You should discuss this with your advisor immediately. You can call me for assistance.

Surprise visa refusals

In a perfect world, you would expect to get notice from the Department before your visa application is refused.

Unfortunately, we don’t live in a perfect world, and it might well be that your application for a visa is refused without any notice given to you in advance of the decision.

Different to visa cancellation

Visa refusals are different to visa cancellations in many ways. Importantly, visa cancellations tend not to be made with prior notice. Visa cancellations usually have far more serious consequences than visa refusals. If you can appeal your visa cancellation, you only have 7 days to lodge the appeal if your visa is cancelled, but if your visa is refused, you’ll usually have 21 days to appeal.

Your experience?

Please share your comments with me.

I’d love to know more about your experience!