What does "conducive to the public good" mean in UK immigration laws?
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3If you want to know what a law means, you may want to visit our sister site Law instead. We can only help with travel related questions, and it's not clear how your question is related to travel within the scope defined in the help center.– Michael HamptonCommented Feb 11, 2020 at 9:23
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2Whatever the secretary of state wants it to mean.– CMasterCommented Feb 11, 2020 at 10:39
2 Answers
It is a general catch-all for keeping people out who might engage in criminal, anti-social or politically divisive activity.
It literally means: "Is the presence of this individual in the UK going to be good for the UK public?"
It relates to the character, conduct, and associations of an individual wanting to enter the UK https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/827971/GGFR-Section-1-v29.0-EXT.PDF
For example:
• a person is a member of a proscribed group
• a person is suspected of war crimes or crimes against humanity
• a person’s presence is undesirable because of their character, conduct or associations
• a person’s presence might lead to an infringement of UK law or a breach of public order
• a person’s presence may lead to an offence being committed by someone else