Daylife Select
A point & click tool to create dynamic content portals. Learn More »
There is no pinned content in this Editor's Picks module.
Click here to learn more about content pinning.
The Home Office is the United Kingdom government department responsible for immigration control, security and order. As such it is responsible for the police, United Kingdom Borders Agency and MI5. It also in charge of government policy on security-related issues such as drugs, counter-terrorism and ID cards. Full Article
Corel Home Office Simplifies Tasks for Consumers.
View Photo »Corel Home Office Simplifies Tasks for Consumers.
View Photo »Britain's Home Office Minister Caroline Flint is seen hosting a news conference, to launch the booklet entitled 'Preparing for Emergencies - what you need to know', in London in this July 26, 2004 file photograph.
View Photo »Britain's Home Office Minister Alan Campbell (L) talks with Colombia's Vice President Francisco Santos during a news conference in Bogota May 5, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Home Office Minister Alan Campbell speaks during a news conference in Bogota May 5, 2009.
View Photo »LONDON - APRIL 30: In this photo illustration a Home Office leaflet containing advice for those returning home from Cancun in Mexico with flu like symptoms is displayed at Gatwick Airport on April 30, 2009 in London, England.
View Photo »LONDON - APRIL 30: In this photo illustration a Home Office leaflet containing advice for those returning home from Cancun in Mexico with flu like symptoms is displayed at Gatwick Airport on April 30, 2009 in London, England.
View Photo »LONDON - APRIL 30: In this photo illustration a Home Office leaflet containing advice for those returning home from Cancun in Mexico with flu like symptoms is displayed at Gatwick Airport on April 30, 2009 in London, England.
View Photo »British Home Office Minister Margaret Hillier (L) talks with Czech Interior Minister Ivan Langer on January 15, 2009 before an informal Interior Affairs Council meeting at the Congress Center in Prague.
View Photo »A Home Office worker demonstrates the use of new facial recognition gates at the North Terminal of Gatwick Airport near London, November 23, 2009.
View Photo »MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 16: Home Office minister Phil Woolas has his fingerprints and photograph scanned as he enrols for the National Identity card at Manchester passport office on November 16, 2009 in Manchester, England.
View Photo »MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 16: Home Office minister Phil Woolas has his fingerprints and photograph scanned as he enrols for the National Identity card at Manchester passport office on November 16, 2009 in Manchester, England.
View Photo »MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 16: Home Office minister Phil Woolas has his fingerprints and photograph scanned as he enrols for the National Identity card at Manchester passport office on November 16, 2009 in Manchester, England.
View Photo »LONDON, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 12: Conservative Member of Parliament Damian Green walks near Parliament on October 12, 2009 in London. An official report has said that the arrest of the Tory front bencher during an inquiry into Home Office leaks was 'not proportionate'.
View Photo »Jordanian doctor Mohammed Asha carries his son, surrounded by relatives and friends, upon his arrival in Amman, Jordan, Monday, Sept. 7, 2009.
View Photo »New Home Secretary Alan Johnson speaks to media representatives outside the Home Office in London on June 5, 2009, following the resignation of Jacqui Smith and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's emergency Cabinet reshuffle.
View Photo »New Home Secretary Alan Johnson speaks to media representatives outside the Home Office in London on June 5, 2009, following the resignation of Jacqui Smith and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's emergency Cabinet reshuffle.
View Photo »New Home Secretary Alan Johnson speaks to media representatives outside the Home Office in London on June 5, 2009, following the resignation of Jacqui Smith and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's emergency Cabinet reshuffle.
View Photo »New Home Secretary Alan Johnson speaks to media representatives outside the Home Office in London on June 5, 2009, following the resignation of Jacqui Smith and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's emergency Cabinet reshuffle.
View Photo »New Home Secretary Alan Johnson speaks to media representatives outside the Home Office in London on June 5, 2009, following the resignation of Jacqui Smith and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's emergency Cabinet reshuffle.
View Photo »New Home Secretary Alan Johnson speaks to media representatives outside the Home Office in London on June 5, 2009, following the resignation of Jacqui Smith and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's emergency Cabinet reshuffle.
View Photo »Estonian Justice Minister Rein Lang (L) shakes hand with British Parliamentary Undersecretary of State at the Home Office in charge of security Alan West (R), in front of his cabinet secretary Kenny MacAskill (C) on June 4, 2009 before the start of a Justice and Home Affairs Council mee...
View Photo »British actress and campaigner for the rights of Gurkha military veterans, Joanna Lumley, right, addresses protesters gathered outside the Houses of Parliament in London as Ministers face a cross-party showdown in the Commons over a controversial Home Office decision to limit the numbe...
View Photo »British actress and campaigner for the rights of Gurkha military veterans, Joanna Lumley, centre, addresses protesters gathered outside the Houses of Parliament in London as Members of Parliament face a cross-party debate over a controversial Home Office decision to limit the number of...
View Photo »British Home Secretary Jacqui Smith (L) meets with US Attorney General Eric Holder at the Home Office in central London, on April 27, 2009.
View Photo »We got absolutely no advice whatsoever. The lack of advice from the FCO [Foreign and Commonwealth Office], the Home Office and DFID [the Department for International Development] was appalling.
This is unbelievable conduct from the UK Government Home Office and its agencies. They are supposed to control the border. What on earth are they playing at? Gordon Brown and (Home Secretary) Alan Johnson have serious questions to answer.
We are all very keen that if the government wishes to tighten immigration rules it does so incrementally and not with a blanket approach, which would be so damaging to the industry ... The minister listened and is going to write to language schools to try and reassure them. We will wait and see what rec...
Ever since, nobody has said they were sorry, not the House of Commons, the Home Office, the police or the Government. I respect her for that.
We made a tentative approach to get a work permit and the word we got back from the Home Office was that we couldn't get that through in time to get Adem signed in January
Tens of billions of pounds are wasted on systems ranging from the calamitous £20bn NHS supercomputer to the poorly managed Home Office probation service IT system
We got absolutely no advice whatsoever. The lack of involvement by the FCO (Britain's Foreign and Commonwealth Office), the Home Office and the Department for International Development was appalling
There was this Pythonic situation where he was sent to Cardiff one night and told to report to the Home Office the next day, except the interview was in Croydon ... So he comes back to London and all of his allowance has been spent on a train ticket and he doesn't know anything about Croydon. But then a...
This is the Home Office looking for 'intelligence' to justify its plans just as the government did in Iraq
Junior Home Office Minister Meg Hillier said the cards would be particularly useful for students and young people as they would 'save the cost and hassle' of getting into clubs and bars.
The Government's attempt to store innocent people's DNA for up to 12 years has been categorically slated by the experts, forcing them into an embarrassing climb-down in Parliament. The Home Office needs to put an end to this charade by removing all innocent people from the database, once and for all.
It's been a long time coming, but we're delighted the Home Office made the right decision.
Just as the UN torture monitor is kicked out of the country and Amnesty warns of increasing violence, the Home Office says that Zimbabwe is getting safer. The only people who won’t be laughing are Zimbabwean asylum seekers in the UK. They will now be terrified that they could soon be returned to a count...
I will be organising Mixed Touch Rugby and Mixed Tug of War at the Home Office (London and the South East) Winter Games on Thursday 26th November. Special Leave with pay for Home Office staff working inside London and the South East — subject to line management authorisation — can be applied for. Are yo...
I will be organising Mixed Touch Rugby and Mixed Tug of War at the Home Office (London and the South East) Winter Games on Thursday 26th November. Special Leave with pay for Home Office staff working inside London and the South East — subject to line management authorisation — can be applied for. Are yo...
It was the Cabinet Office, not the Home Office, was the driving force on bringing the police in
This is another victory for Article 8 of the Human Rights Convention which protects the personal privacy of everyone in Britain. This law was breached by the largest DNA database per capita in the world and would still be breached by the Home Office's discredited proposals.
I support the Home Office's decision because the situation is now substantially different
The British Home Office effectively orchestrated the BOCs' statelessness
The implication is that the Met allowed themselves to be pressured by the Cabinet Office or the Home Office, and pursued the case more vigorously than they might otherwise have done. It might have been better to simply ask Damian Green in for a chat, rather than launching a mob-handed arrest and search.
This is the same misleading line as before ... Whatever he says about a card, the plan remains the same: to treat the entire population like dangerous sex offenders and keep us all on a Home Office database for life.
We selected Pershing because they have a very strong and experienced management team, and a platform that has the global capabilities, resources, and operational support that our financial consultants need in order to provide our clients with comprehensive and innovative financial solutions ... Our Home...
This unedifying row just underlines why Baroness Scotland's position is now completely untenable. But it also raises huge question marks over the way the Home Office and the prime minister have handled the case. The Home Office rushed through an investigation without listening to all the evidence, and t...
All business crimes are recorded in accordance with Home Office guidelines and all crimes in Dorset are appropriately investigated.
- CuriousGuru
1 minute ago
- Teachyouonline
3 minutes ago
- RT_me_tech
5 minutes ago
- elreg
5 minutes ago
