Skilled visa newsletters – April 2021
Read MoreIn an interview with SBS Punjabi, Immigration Minister Alex Hawke addresses the plight of Australians and temporary visa holders, including international students, stuck in a ‘difficult, dangerous and upsetting’ situation in COVID-ravaged India.
Read MoreA globally rampant COVID-19 pandemic and problems with Australia’s vaccine roll-out suggest our international education sector is facing a continued fall in enrolments through 2021 and into 2022.
Read MoreOne state could start to accept more than 100 international student arrivals per week under a grand plan to reignite the economy.
Read MoreImmigration Minister Alex Hawke said a ‘well-managed’ skilled migration program will underpin the planning levels for 2021-22 with a strong commitment to fill critical skill gaps to support businesses in regional areas and cities.
Read MoreLaw, science, engineering, arts and architecture students will be offered a new course in innovation and entrepreneurship at the University of Sydney from next year.
Read MoreMonash University and the University of Technology Sydney experienced declines of more than 30 per cent in their international student intakes compared with semester one 2019
Read MoreAustralian migration policy has been exceptionally uncertain for a year and more already. Even before the pandemic, the government was trying to encourage migrants to scatter all over the country rather than merely in major cities such as Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane. To reduce the continuously growing stress to the infrastructures in the big cities…
Read MoreNumbers of temporary visa applications, both educational and vocational, are rapidly declining as Home Affairs still deals with a Bridging visa backlog
Read MoreNew South Wales and Victoria, usually the two Australian states that host the largest cohort of international students, are drawing up plans to bring back their share of international students from their home countries where they have been stranded for months together due to the border closure of March 2020.
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